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THE FORMATION OF COLLEGE ENGLISH:
LITERACY STUDIES FROM THE PURITANS TO THE POSTMODERNS
Table of Contents
INTRODUCTION: WORKING PAST THE PROFESSION
Histories of the Four Corners of the Field
Literacy, Literacy Studies, the Literate and Literary
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1. LEARNING AND THE LEARNED IN COLONIAL NEW ENGLAND
The Corporation on the Hill
The "Circle of Learning" within the Curriculum
The Great Awakening: "The word was sharper than a two-edged sword"
The Introduction of Formal English Studies
Conclusion: From Public Seminaries to Private Corporations
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2. REPUBLICAN RHETORIC
The First Professorships of English
Oratorical Literature and the New Learning
Moral Philosophy and the Politics of Republican Education
The Reading Public that Became the Republic
Conclusion: The Formation of English and the Transformation of Civil Society
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3. WHEN COLLEGES WERE LITERARY INSTITUTIONS
The Diversification and Consolidation of Literate Expertise
Schooling the Public in “Republican Institutions of Self-Government”
The Political Economy of the Liberal Arts
The Transition from Rhetoric through Composition to Literature
Conclusion: Literature and Literacy in the Extracurriculum
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4. HOW THE TEACHING OF LITERACY GAVE RISE TO THE PROFESSION OF
LITERATURE
Articulating the Cost of Admissions
Mapping out the Field of Work
How Work with Literacy Became Isolated from Language Studies and Public Discourse
The Pragmatics of Making a Difference
“Criticism, Inc.”
Conclusion: Why College English Didn’t Become a More Progressive Discipline
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5. AT THE ENDS OF THE PROFESSION
From Social Reconstruction to Life Adjustment in Postwar General Education
English Education in the “Golden Age” of the Profession
The Crisis in Literacy and Literary Studies in the 1970s
The Strategic Possibilities of Rhetoric in the Curricular Revisions of the 1980s
Conclusion: A “humanistic conception” of “an active participation in practical life”
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CONCLUSION: WHY THE PRAGMATICS OF LITERACY ARE CRITICAL
Critical Junctures in the History of Literacy and Literacy Studies
Literary and Literacy Crises, or What’s an English Major For?
Organizing Teaching
Realizing the Pragmatic Potentials of Departments of Literacy
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WORKS CITED
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INTRODUCTION
WORKING PAST THE PROFESSION
Very much depends upon what we select from which to start and very much depends upon whether we
select our point of departure in order to tell . . . what . . . ought to be or what is.
(Dewey, The Public and Its Problems)
My history of college English studies begins by looking past the rise of the profession in the
last century to explore how the teaching of English in American colleges has been shaped by broader
developments in literacy since the colonial period. Reflecting upon those developments can help us to
come to terms with the changes in literacy that are redefining what we teach and how we study it.
Most English departments have come to include a diverse array of critics, compositionists, writers,
applied linguists, and educators who sometimes seem to share little more than a mailing address. If
English is a discipline, what are its parameters and priorities, and how does it encompass the varied
subjects that are taught in courses that run the gamut from first-year composition to graduate seminars
in literature and ESL? The incoherence of the field is amply documented in the bundle of courses that
make up the traditional undergraduate major in English. Rather than being guided by research on
students changing needs, curricular requirements are often made up of historical comprises and
accommodations. As detailed in the national surveys that will be examined in later chapters, a
traditional literature major generally includes a token course on language and an advanced writing
course, though many departments have responded to the popularity of writing courses by adding a
parallel major or track in creative writing, and perhaps business or technical writing. Rarely do
English majors provide any cohesive sense of the range of concerns that are addressed in departments
that have expanded to include studies of world Englishes, online literacies, and the other areas of
English studies that have grown up around the confines of a modern sense of literature. This
incoherence is a product of our history, and I believe that a review of that history can help us make
sense of what college English is, and perhaps what it ought to be as well.
English departments generally include a collocation of subject matters that can be grouped
into four general areas: literature, language, English education, and writing. Each of these areas
includes varied sub-specialties. For example, writing is a disjointed area of study divided up by the
developments in composition and creative writing that have tended to set them at odds. Because our
concerns are so wide ranging, the historical development of the four corners of our field have largely
been examined in isolation from each other. The best known account of our discipline is Gerald
Graff’s recently re-released history of “the profession of literature.” As Graff acknowledges in the
Preface to the new edition, the reduction of English studies to literary studies has tended to
marginalize the teaching of writing, language, and English education. For their part, histories of
rhetoric and composition have tended to concentrate on the development of composition courses and
have paid little attention to the efforts of teachers of fiction and poetry to distinguish themselves from
journalists and other teachers of writing. Few histories of English have attended to the development of
grammar, philology, or linguistics within English studies, in part because linguistics is presumed to
have its own disciplinary history (even though departments of linguistics are generally confined to
research universities). The institutional history of English education has also not been studied, though
that is changing as historians have begun to reexamine how English education became peripheral to
English studies.
Each of these areas has a history that predates the establishment of English departments, and
those histories are integral to the institutional development of the teaching of English in American
colleges. I will integrate those histories into that development by characterizing English studies not as
literary studies but as literacy studies. I realize that using this term in this way is problematic. With the
“New Literacy Studies,” literacy studies (like cultural studies) has become an interdisciplinary, even
post-disciplinary movement. Literacy studies cannot really be claimed by any particular discipline—
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and if it could, professors of education would have a better claim to make than professors of English.
Nonetheless, defining English studies as literacy studies provides a frame of reference that connects
the teaching of English to broader trends in literacy and the literate. Attending to those trends can help
us see our discipline’s concentration on a modern sense of literature as one chapter in a history that
extends back to previous eras when literature was defined in religious, oratorical, and belletristic
terms. Each of those historical formations has included different modes of reading, writing, and
teaching with their own distinctive epistemologies, technologies, and political economies. In each
case, literature was upheld as the paragon of literacy that was defined by genres and modes of
expression that were taken to represent the literate in highly valued ways.
Literature, literacy, and the literate define each other within a shifting field of cultural
production whose structure can be framed by drawing on the theories of Pierre Bourdieu. As Bourdieu
discusses in The Field of Cultural Production, a field of literary or artistic production differs from a
field of study that has obvious use value (such as the basic teaching of reading and writing) because an
aesthetic field has to distinguish not only its objects of discourse but also the values that legitimize the
distinctions it draws around those objects (164). The “symbolic capital” of any artistic field has
economic and political value, but that value accrues only through long-term investments that enable an
individual to assume the prestige vested in the aesthetic object (7). Through experience and
instruction, practitioners in a field develop “a feel for the game,” often tacitly, as they acquire a sense
for what makes a story or stance interesting or useful (17). In the process, practitioners come to
distinguish themselves from amateurs and others who put their objects of study to different uses
(Practical Reason 102). A discipline’s generic expectations form the competencies and capacities that
constitute its field of cultural production (Field 176). In this sense, the discipline of college English
studies is broader and more mutable than the profession of college English as we generally understand
it. Our profession is but one institutional formation with its own distinctive conceptions of literature
and literacy that are integrally involved with how literacy is acquired and evaluated—which are in turn
shaped by broader developments in educational access, changing technologies of literacy, and the
modes of self-representation that are valued by the literate classes in a particular period.
This framework can help us to look past some the assumptions that have limited our
perspective on our field of work. Even our best histories have tended to view our past from the
standpoint of research universities. Research universities tend to be central to our professional sense of
self because they are where most of us acquired the professional credentials to do what we do.
However, when we center “our” history on research universities, we tend to overlook much of our
field of work, and many of our coworkers. If we consider changes in literacy as a framework for
disciplinary developments, then we would expect to see those developments emerge not at the centers
but at the boundaries of the field—in more accessible institutions where literacy changes as privileged
forms are put to new uses by less assimilated populations. Much of our thinking about disciplinary
developments still tacitly presumes that theory is disseminated down to practitioners on the ground in
the field. Histories of ideas within disciplines have tended to center on leading thinkers as the sources
of change. This stance is understandable because “our” histories are generally written by those of us
who have been granted time to do research, and those of us who occupy positions that provide time to
do research would like to think that what we write shapes the development of what we do. How that
actually works remains an open question. I will try to address that question by considering
commentaries on the discipline as representations of how its changing assumptions are accounted for
in ways that expand or limit its social engagements, institutional practices, and critical capacities.
If we define our field of study by the work we do, we may be able to acknowledge that
changes in the discipline are less akin to the history of ideas than to changes in languages and
In “The Implications of the New Literacy Studies for Literacy Education,” Brian Street traces out a line
of development that parallels the histories of English studies I will survey in the first section. According to
Street, literacy ceased being defined as an autonomous object of study as the focus shifted to examine the
institutional and ideological contexts that shape the composition, circulation, and reception of literate practices.
As I will discuss, these trends have been articulated in complementary ways by those studying language, writing,
literature, and teaching. For example, Gee’s “Literacy, Discourse, and Linguistics” shows how such linguistic
categories such as contact codes, interference, pidginization, and creolization can be used to examine the social
practices that constitute varied literate discourses.
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literacies. Languages and literacies change in broadly based, socially negotiated ways—through use,
particularly in spaces and institutions where received modes of expression are inflected by new users.
To understand disciplinary changes at work, we need to hold our theories accountable to the
transactions of teachers and students at work in class, where literate forms change in tandem with the
uses that are made of them. In broadly based institutions, literate conventions are explained to those
who have not acquired them as part of their natural upbringing. In the process conventions may come
to seem less natural as they are questioned and explained in ways that may or may not make sense of
the experience of others. In such spaces, which Mary Louise Pratt has taught us to see as “contact
zones,” the discipline has evolved at an elemental level as it has been pressed to come to terms with
the experiences of those who make their way through our gateway courses. In such spaces, college
English has been inflected by the idioms and aspirations of those working through it. Canonical texts
have been reinterpreted through shifting registers of experience in a process that Pratt has termed
“transculturation.”2
Attending to those points and processes can help us come to terms with the expansive
institutional base of college English studies. English is the most widely taught subject in American
schools and colleges, and our field extends from teaching people how to articulate their aspirations to
interpreting the classics of the literate culture and preparing the literate to write for popular and
specialized audiences. The profession has discounted these expansive engagements in ways it has
come to regret as more than “service” courses have been temped out to paraprofessionals. Most
college English classes are now taught by “temporary” faculty and teaching assistants. This
development has pressed the profession to take account of its broader responsibilities. According to
the Association of Departments of English (ADE) Ad Hoc Committee on Staffing in 1999, “the
institutionalization of a multitiered faculty that is sharply divided in its levels of compensation and
security of employment” threatens “the capacity of the academic profession to renew itself and pass on
to the future the ideal of the scholar-teacher—the faculty member who, while pursuing new knowledge
takes active responsibility for the institution, the department, and all parts of the curriculum” (4).
This capacity can be strengthened by investing more of our intellectual energies into our
expansive power base. One way to think about that need is to think about English studies as literacy
studies. English is taught from grammar to graduate school, but English professors rarely attend to
their expansive educational base because academics have historically claimed professional standing
not as educators but as disciplinary specialists. College English studies have been particularly
debilitated by academics’ tendency to distance their professional purposes from their service duties.
English departments had to discount broadly influential areas of their work to disarticulate their
specialized expertise from their expansive engagements with general and teacher education. As I will
discuss in the chapter on the progressive era, the hierarchies that have structured the profession have
systematically ignored writing, teaching, and teacher preparation—a curiously dysfunctional structure
given the fact that these are precisely what is involved in the “capacity of the academic profession to
renew itself and pass on” its distinctive forms of expertise. Our disciplinary expertise is centrally
concerned with studying and teaching literacy, insofar as many undergraduates and most graduate
students in English will teach for a living—though you would hardly know that from most of the
programs of study that prepare them for that work.
Literacy studies provides an integrative framework that founds work with literature, language,
writing, and teaching on an equal footing by providing a bottom-up perspective that focuses on the
expansive powerbase of our discipline. In the next section, I will follow through to use literacy studies
to synthesize histories of the teaching of literature, language studies, English education, and writing in
American colleges. A broadly based historical perspective on college English studies is needed to
provide a more coherent sense of what English departments are about, and for. As I and others have
noted, English departments have become bastions of the culture of the book as they come to assume a
position with respect to the literate culture that parallels that which classics departments came to with
Pratt (1991) defines contact zones as “social spaces where cultures meet, clash, and grapple with each
other, often in contexts of highly asymmetrical relations of power” (34). Her concept has proven useful in
discussions of the classroom. See, for example, Bizzell, “Contact Zones,” and Richard Miller. Pratt has defined
transculturation as the “processes whereby members of subordinated or marginal groups select and invent from
the materials transmitted by a dominant or metropolitan culture” (36).
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the transition from classical to modern cultural studies a century ago. Teaching close reading can be a
radical undertaking in a culture beset by attention deficit disorder, but we need to develop more
expansive and integrative accounts of what English departments do. Such accounts may be able to
foster a shared sense of purpose that is responsive to the technological and social changes that have
redefined what it means to be literate. English departments are not as stable as they were when the
classics of literature were viewed as central to the education of every literate person. Rhetoric and
composition programs may well follow the centrifugal trajectories that took speech, drama, and
journalism out of university English departments as they came to define themselves by a modern sense
of literature. English departments are losing their hold on professors working with projects ranging
from ethnic to media studies. The centrifugal forces that are pulling college English apart are
paralleled by the centripetal pressures that are converging on its institutional base. Both sets of forces
are coming from social and institutional changes that can best be addressed by developing coalitions
with other teachers of English. Such coalitions have proved effective at other historical junctures
where literacy studies have been pressed to adapt to broader changes in literacy and the literate.
Reviewing what English studies have been about can help us assess what they are about to become.
Histories of the Four Corners of the Field
As I will explore in later chapters, historic transitions in English studies arise at critical
junctures where developments in literacy studies, literacy, and the literate converge. In this book, I
will try to set out a pragmatic stance that is attentive to the possibilities for change that emerge at
junctures where expanding disciplinary trends connect with social and technological shifts in literacy.
Those shifts sometimes converge with institutional changes, especially those that shape educational
access to the literate classes. These socio-institutional developments have been touched upon by some
of the most useful research on the historical development of studies of literature, writing, language,
and English education. This research has contributed to the pragmatic stance that the profession has
adopted in recent decades as institutional resources have declined and the profession has been pressed
to account for itself in more practical terms. Those declines have pressed the profession to attend to
the debilitating disjunction between its traditional research mission and its basic institutional duties. In
response, our histories and professional commentaries have begun to pay more attention to
institutional processes such as professionalization and articulation. Stanley Fish was one of the most
visible representatives of the pragmatic turn that was adopted in response to the collapse of jobs and
majors in the 1970s and the “culture wars” in the 1980s. This pragmatic stance has become
increasingly important as the numbers of professional positions in the field have continued to decline.
Before outlining my history of English studies as literacy studies, I will sketch out how this pragmatic
stance provides a focal point for converging trends in several of the best-known histories of the
teaching of literature, language, English education, and writing.
The pragmatic turn of the 1980s shaped the institutional focus of our most noted disciplinary
history—Gerald Graff’s Professing Literature: An Institutional History. Graff surveys how
professional practices have been shaped by the debates among shifting alliances of humanists,
philologists, teachers, and critics, with each generation failing to make practical use of its generative
oppositions. Successive generations were accused of “elevating esoteric, technocratic jargon over
humanistic values, coming between literature itself and the student, [and] turning literature into an
elitist pastime for specialists” (4). Graff offered incisive assessments of the pragmatics of institutional
change, including the tendency of departments to accommodate change by adding isolated courses in
areas such as feminist theory. Graff called for professors to make use of their differences by “teaching
the conflicts” among schools of criticism. Graff claimed that teaching the conflicts would help
departments develop cohesive programs of study without marginalizing differences. On this and other
points, Graff set out practical strategies for intervening in institutional change. Graff’s own
engagement with the pragmatics of professionalism have expanded in ways that parallel developments
in the careers of other noted commentators such as Robert Scholes, Stanley Fish, and Richard Lanham.
After gaining recognition in the 1970s with works on literary theory, Graff and these other critics
turned in the 1980s to position disciplinary debates in institutional contexts, and then they expanded
their focus still farther afield to explain the discipline to broader audiences, as in Graff’s Clueless in
Academe: How Schooling Obscures the Life of the Mind and the textbooks he has published to provide
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students with heuristics for reading academic conventions. In the writings of such commentators, one
can see how our discipline’s focus has shifted from traditional objects of study to the institutional
practices of the field, and then to articulating the work of the field to broader audiences.
One of the most insightful examples of the pragmatic turn in literary studies in the 1980s was
Evan Watkins’ Work Time: English Departments and the Circulation of Cultural Value (1989). Work
Time has some of the limitations of other accounts that equate English studies with literary studies, but
in other respects, the work has a considerable range and depth of vision. Watkins examines English
departments as “a site of cultural production” that is positioned within economies in which the values
of literary studies circulate as evaluations of students’ literate abilities (8). With a theoretical
sophistication that is quite instructive, Watkins acknowledged that the professed values of literature
occupy a “marginal position in the circulation of ideologies,” as compared to television, film, and
advertising. However, English departments have a “relatively crucial position in the social circulation
of people” through education (25). Watkins called upon the discipline to attend to the circulation of its
work through the lives of those who work through it, particularly those spaces where the critical
responses of students can exercise practical agency. Watkins attended to the pragmatic conditions and
consequences of what gets done in English departments. He recognized that students often see a
critical analysis of a literary work as an “empty” promise because they do not have free time to reflect
upon the politics of signification in the ways that professors do. Unfortunately, Watkins did not
consider that many teachers of English are also denied the time to reflect upon what they do by the
institutional economies at work in English departments. Watkins strategically presumed upon the fact
that virtually all college students are required to take composition courses to argue that literary studies
has a “crucial” position in the circulation of literacy. This presumption has been critiqued by Richard
Miller in “Fault Lines in the Contact Zone.”
Work Time calculatedly explained the pragmatics of literary studies without acknowledging
their dependence on composition, which in the decade in which Work Time appeared had grown from
a peripheral service area with only four percent of job listings in MLA postings to become the single
largest area of professional hiring. In 1987, there were twice as many MLA postings for rhetoric,
composition, and technical writing (30.3%) as for all periods of British literature (15.1%) (Huber,
Pinney, and Laurence). By 1989, graduate programs in rhetoric and composition had been added to
one third of doctoral institutions, with public universities three times more likely to have added such
programs (Huber, “Report”). Those programs are one of the clearest examples of how shifts in our
institutional base have bubbled up to force changes in professional structures, rather than trickled
down from elite institutions. In fact elite research universities have programmatically ignored the
expansion of graduate studies to include studies of rhetoric and composition and have confined the
teaching of writing to service units, sometimes led by a token faculty member with professional
expertise in rhetoric and composition.
The pragmatic turn in the 1980s deepened as the exclusion of writing teachers from the
“profession of literature” began to be reassessed. Where Graff saw the profession arising out of a
moribund classicism and outmoded belletrism in nineteenth-century colleges, Susan Miller and other
historians of composition and rhetoric blamed the profession itself for reducing rhetoric to ancillary
courses in stylistic formalities that were divorced from the broader concerns of classical rhetoric. In
Rescuing the Subject in 1989 and then two years later in Textual Carnivals, Miller argued for recentering disciplinary studies on acts of student writing in order to redress the presumed opposition of
subjects and objects of literacy. As Miller discussed, the moments where writers develop their
intellectual capacities through collaborative mediations are central to realizing the critical potentials of
literacy studies. In his 1994 article criticizing those who have failed to attend to the pragmatics of
pedagogy, Richard Miller concludes that the history of our discipline needs to be rewritten by the
standpoint of how student writing has been “solicited, read, and responded to” (175).3
This pragmatic standpoint was set out in David Russell’s history of writing across the
curriculum in 1991. As Russell discussed, disciplines are rhetorically composed through the writings
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Robert Scholes is about the only historian from outside rhetoric and composition who has examined
how literary studies evolved out of their opposition to writing studies. Scholes’s Rise and Fall of English is also
one of the few histories to come from any area of English studies that acknowledges that if we are to change
these debilitating hierarchies, we will need to build coalitions with teachers of English in the schools.
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that make up the field—beginning with student examinations and theses, proceeding through the
publications that yield promotions, and culminating with the research that composes the field’s body
of knowledge. Like Graff, Russell offered topoi that have proven their explanatory power in how they
have been used to explain institutional forces at work. Russell’s concept of “the rhetoric of transparent
disciplinarity” helps to explain why academics have paid so little attention to their work with teaching
and writing. The process of composing disciplinary expertise tends to be conceived as simply a matter
of writing up research because acknowledging that expertise is rhetorically negotiated raises critical
questions about whose purposes that knowledge serves. As I will discuss when I draw on his work in
later chapters, Russell’s history shows how disciplines reduce their learning capacities by treating
writing as a basic skill to be mastered elsewhere. “Content” faculty become disoriented from the
pragmatics of what they do if they fail to attend to the rhetorical forms and collaborative processes that
shape their work. Because our discipline has such an expansive involvement with writing and
teaching, it has been especially incapacitated by failing to attend more fully to these forms and
processes. Part of what has been missed is the historical contribution of women to our work. Teaching
was the first area of the public sphere that opened up to women. The “feminization” of teaching
shaped the development of English education, and English departments’ reactions to it. Teacher
education has been the primary conduit for women, workers, and people of color who looked to
education as a means to social advancement, and professors at vital junctures in the development of
our discipline have looked down upon teaching in part because they saw it as women’s work.
A similar reaction against popular needs and aspirations has shaped the history of writing
instruction, most obviously the distancing of creative writing from journalism and other areas of
writing studies. Writing for the public has generally been discounted because academics define their
standing by their specialized expertise rather than by their ability to communicate that expertise to
others, but the interactive technologies that are transforming literacy are giving renewed significance
to the discipline’s engagement with writing at work in public life. Redressing the disjuncture between
creative and other writing courses can foster vital intradisciplinary alliances, as Mayers discussed in
(Re)Writing Craft: Composition, Creative Writing and the Future of English. In the only book-length
history of creative writing, D.G. Myers has examined how it emerged out of advanced composition
courses in the progressive era (see also Adams). According to Myers, creative writing was welcomed
as a means to engage with “the literary act, not the literary record,” by humanists such as Norman
Foerster, who founded the noted program at Iowa to prepare writers to promote the humanities to the
public (31). Courses in creative writing and journalism set out historical alternatives to the modes of
authorship that academic critics used to set themselves above journalistic critics. Such hierarchies need
to be reevaluated. The discipline’s historical concern for writing for public audiences is one of its most
powerful capacities, and the progressive era provides one of the most telling examples of the political
potentials of journalism and journalism majors. The progressive tradition in creative writing has
generally been ignored because it treated the creative experience as part of everyday life and did not
give literature the special standing that the profession was building for itself, as I will discuss in
chapter four when I turn to works such as Dewey’s Art as Experience and Experience and Education.
Little attention has been given to the pragmatic alternatives that were available to college
English at the origins of the profession, and even less has been given to the public engagements of the
third corner of the field, language studies. The civic potentials of language studies have been
insightfully explored in Andresen’s Linguistics in America, 1769-1924. As I will try to do in later
chapters, Andresen looks past the origins of the profession to locate the historical sources of the
discipline in republican efforts to codify the national language, its literature and teaching. Language
conventions were only one domain that reformers organized into an area of expertise as the sphere of
educated discourse expanded beyond the republic of letters in which the literate had represented the
public. Noah Webster and his contemporaries formalized linguistic and literary conventions in order to
provide standards that upheld the authority of the literate. Unlike their better-known European
contemporaries, antebellum linguists were more pedagogical and less intent on making language into a
science. As Andresen details, this “conventionalist” conception of language was engaged with
language use and learning in ways that were lost when linguistics (and literature) became conceived as
autonomous disciplines divorced from their educational sources and applications. Andresen centers the
history of linguistics on sociolinguistics and the other applied studies that have taken on renewed
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importance with the rise of ESL programs within English studies. Andresen’s analyses are aptly
complemented by histories of attitudes to literacy and literature such as those of Cmiel, Zobray, and
especially Lawrence Levine. These histories will provide the context for my analysis of how a modern
sense of literature became instituted as a subject of study in reaction to the cheapening of literacy by
the spread of the periodical press and common schools in the antebellum period.
As I hope to demonstrate more fully in later chapters, historical studies of literature,
linguistics, and composition take on broader significance when they are brought to bear on the least
professionally visible and most broadly influential corner of the field, English education. The history
of English education has been examined by Arthur N. Applebee’s Tradition and Reform in the
Teaching of English: A History. In the decades since Applebee’s history was published in 1974, we
have come to think differently about the institutional and ideological dynamics of education, though
we sometimes still tacitly perpetuate the sort of assumptions that Applebee worked from. For example,
Applebee’s chapter on “The Birth of a Subject” begins with the commonplace that before it “could
emerge as a major school study, English, and in particular English literature, had to develop a
methodology rigorous enough to win academic respect” (21). Such assumptions locate historical
agency in researchers and leave teachers as consumers of knowledge composed elsewhere. English
teachers have sometimes been generations ahead of English professors in elite institutions, as Lucille
Schultz has examined in her account of how nineteenth-century teachers developed process-oriented
models to teach writing while professors perpetuated the formalism of “current-traditional” rhetoric. A
more richly conceptualized view of pedagogy is provided by the works of Salvatori and Carr, Carr,
and Schultz. Such archival research is vital if we are to expand our understanding of how knowledge is
socially constructed and institutionally negotiated, particularly in the traditions of women, laborers,
and minorities who have historically been denied access to the educational centers of the elite culture.
In English education, as in other strategic areas, the development of the discipline has been
interlaced with the anxieties and aspirations of teachers and writers, of women and working people,
and of those who work with them in less prestigious areas and departments. Those anxieties and
aspirations converge on introductory courses. From the start, the profession has looked down upon
such menial matters and set higher purposes for itself. Unfortunately, the profession’s worst fears have
limited some of the discipline’s best hopes for articulating its practical benefits in ways that might
have strengthened the positions of practitioners in the field. To expand our historical frame of
reference beyond the politics of the profession, we need to look not up to trends in elite institutions but
down to elemental changes at work in class. We need to question many of our historical assumptions,
including the self-serving tendency of researchers to center “our” history on advances in research.
Many useful insights into our work have been provided by Graff and others who have drawn upon
studies of the sociology of professionalism such as Bledstein’s noted The Culture of Professionalism:
The Middle Classes and the Development of Higher Education in America. I will draw upon such
sources as I examine what has now become the most pressing trend in our field: deprofessionalization.
We need to acknowledge that we have contributed to this trend through our own historical failure to
integrate our institutional duties into the professional apparatus of our discipline, including the
graduate programs that prepare practitioners and the publication venues that we use to articulate our
intellectual work. This failure has been compounded by how English departments have devalued their
public engagements in ways that follow academic’s general tendency to discount writing for popular
audiences, applied research, and collaborations with schools and other public agencies.
Bledstein and other works on the sociology of professionalism have helped us to become more
attentive to how universities have served to instill professionalism as the unifying ideology of the
middle classes. English studies have been instrumental in instilling that ideology, as becomes more
broadly apparent when we attend to the educational experiences of “traditionally underrepresented”
populations. Colleges for workers, women, and minorities have been examined by Susan Kates, and
other historians such as Karyn Hollis, Kates have expanded our historical alternatives by looking past
the rise of the profession to explore how teachers and students from various backgrounds have made
use of the discipline in ways that enabled them to exercise rhetorical agency in their own lives. As one
can see in the historical work of representative figures such as Mary Louise Pratt, Anne Ruggles Gere,
Victor Villanueva, and Jackie Royster, perspectives on literacy studies have expanded as women and
scholars of color have moved into leadership positions. Consequently, the discipline has begun to
9
come to terms with the fact that its least respected work has traditionally been done by women, often
in writing and general education courses. As composition and ESL teachers have gained standing in
the profession, some have been able to look past under-funded and overloaded first-year programs to
question traditional hierarchies.
With the pragmatic turn in the profession, the modern opposition of rhetorics and poetics
became exhausted as the confines of modern literary studies collapsed in on themselves. With the
spread of cultural studies, ESL, community and school partnerships, and composition and creative
writing, the four corners of the field have begun to develop converging possibilities. As already noted,
classical rhetoric was enlisted in the 1980s to critique the literary hierarchies of the profession, but
more recent scholarship has suggested that classical rhetorics and poetics had a synthetic relationship
that cannot be appreciated when assessed through the “romantic-modernist antithesis” of “the practical
and the aesthetic” (Jeffrey Walker 45). As Walker detailed, rhetoric was taught through epideictic
texts that dramatized civic values and purposes. According to Walker, epideictic discourse provides
“the ideologies and imageries with which, and by which, the individual members of a community
identify themselves” (10). Walker rereads the “poetic tradition” as a civic art in a way that connects
with the fact that the genre at the center of our discipline is not argument but story, for it is the desire
to write and read stories together that brings most of us into English studies. As the modernist confines
of literary studies have been eroded at their base, Walker provides but one example of how literary and
cultural studies have become understood as modes of ethnography—in the literal sense of ethnography
as “the writings of the tribe.” As at other history junctures, what is deemed literary is changing along
with broader developments in literacy and the literate. This ethnographic impetus has the potential to
connect literary and literacy studies with our work as teachers, for it is in the classroom where students
are asked to tell their story, and then graded on whether they got it right.
Literacy, Literacy Studies, the Literate and Literary
Ethnography provides a way of thinking about literacy that has been vital to the “New
Literacy Studies” and to broader trends in literary, cultural, and linguistic studies (see, for example,
Street’s “What’s ‘new’ in New Literacy Studies?” and Atkinson’s The Ethnographic Imagination).
More anthropological models of literacy have become common as we have moved away from the
sense of literature and literacy that was invested in the experience of books as individual artifacts. As
Street and others have discussed, literacy and literature ceased to be seen as autonomous objects of
study as conceptions of literacy shifted with broader changes in literacy. In the 1970s, literature and
literacy became understood as a socio-institutional constructions as people began to recognize that
“the function of literature and the role of English teachers cannot be understood except within the
context of a given society and politics” (Ohmann, English 303). Literature became more of an
anthropological category that was imbedded in the pragmatics of how people read, write, and teach the
forms that constitute what is taken to be literary in a particular period, as Terry Eagleton discussed in
his influential account of the theoretical trends that contributed to reassessments of the pragmatics of
reading and writing in the 1980s (24). Over the last three centuries, the most valued forms of literacy
have evolved from religious literature through an oratorical concern for style and delivery to a modern
sense of literature as nonfactual works of the imagination. Literature has changed as access to
education expanded and the educated came to play new roles in an increasingly diversified public
sphere. While literature and the literate have always defined each other, the modern conjunction of
literacy and schooling only became established when public education became state mandated. Out of
that conjunction emerged a modern sense of literature, as I will explore in the third chapter.
In the antebellum period, and at other junctures in the history of literacy and literacy studies,
the literate have distinguished themselves by being able to distinguish the virtues of literature. A
specific example of the distinctive capacities of literary studies may be helpful before I survey the
broader history of college English studies as a field of cultural production. A century ago, English
education and literary criticism became academic subjects of study, and the opposition of the latter to
the former came to structure our profession. A noted college textbook on methods for teaching English
was Percival Chubb’s The Teaching of English in the Elementary and Secondary School. Chubb also
published articles for teachers such as the “Blight of Bookishness,” which blamed “the tyrant print”
for closing “our ears to the music of words and minstrelsy” (15). Chubb’s idea that it is voice that
10
distinguishes the power of literature was a throwback to the elocutionary tradition. However, oral
modes of interpretation were still a recognized disciplinary methodology at the formation of the
profession of literature. A prominent proponent of oral interpretation was Chubb’s contemporary
Hiram Corson at Cornell, who taught literature entirely through dramatic readings (see Payne 60-5).
With Corson as an authority, Chubb argued that “the book lies between us and the essentials of literary
beauty.” According to Chubb, “literature is to be read with the ear, as a great conductor reads a
musical score,” for only in well orchestrated gestures can the “emotional appeal of literature” return us
“to our senses!” (“Blight” 19, 22). Disparaging the “fashionable worship of Ph.D.-ities,” Chubb
exhorted teachers to look back to “the fairy princess, Song,” in order to save their students from the
“uniform vulgarity of the culture of the slums” (18). Chubb was just the sort of passionate pedagogue
who embarrassed those who were establishing literature as a professional specialization. Chubb was an
anachronistic figure. He was part of an older tradition in which the literate distinguished themselves by
delivering an impassioned reading. In elocutions, as in essays, students deliver a reading to
demonstrate that they have internalized the “feel for the game.” At different points in our history, the
literate have distinguished that “feel” for literature with acts of sacred devotion to the Word, with
elocutionary performances, and with essays tracing out the nuances of a poem.
Students’ writings document how modes of reading and reasoning have shifted at historical
junctures in the development of learning and the learned. English exercises were included in American
colleges from the founding of Harvard in 1636 to prepare preachers to teach the Word. While English
was included in classroom exercises, students displayed their learning in Latin disputations before the
assembled college, and at graduation before the learned community. Colonial communities were as
closed as the “circle of learning” embodied in the deductive syllogisms composed by students (see
***). Colonial colleges and communities were scribal information economies in which books were
rare and writing served primarily as an aid to memory. Between the populist evangelism of the 1740s
and the American Revolution, scholastic disputations were replaced by forensic debates in English as
the ability to write persuasively gained currency with the spread of the periodical press. As elsewhere
in the British provinces, the transition from ancient to modern cultural studies turned on the
introduction of courses in rhetoric and belles letters.4 That transition was shaped by the emergence of
the essay as a vehicle of popular instruction. Belletristic essays helped to mediate polite tastes through
the spread of the periodical press, as I discussed in the my history of English studies in the British
cultural provinces. In antebellum America, the essays of popular lecturers such as Emerson circulated
through lyceum networks and then were reprinted in magazines and the first anthologies of American
literature. These anthologies provided students with models for their own compositions, for literature
was still understood to be something that students might not only read but also write.
As I will discuss in the first chapter, the scribal literacies of the first century of college English
studies document the schematics of literate technologies and economies in the starkest forms. Scribal
literacy was acquired through apprenticeships with masters who composed compendia from a book or
a predecessor’s notes and then passed that distillation down to students who recited what they had
been read. Writing was recorded speech and was acquired and put to use orally. “Books” of
commonplaces served as an aid to memory because a literate person was understood to be a “walking
library” or obambulans bibliotheca (Meriwether 76). Students’ efforts to reduce all that was known to
what could be remembered are documented in the writings of the studens whom I will discuss in later
chapters. Through the intricate intimacies of learning systems of thought by heart, the schematics of
learning became overlaid on the workings of the mind, with the science of technologicae charged with
charting the relations of mental faculties to all the arts and sciences (see ***). The primary technology
of literate inquiry was the deductive syllogism, with a deductive “system or synopsis” serving as the
archetype for graduate theses. Some students stayed on after being ceremoniously granted “the
privilege of reading in public” at graduation, but when graduate tutors at Harvard first tried to gain
recognition as part of the teaching staff in the early eighteenth century, the administration
As Scholes has discussed, the eighteenth-century “concept of belles letters. . . served as a transition. .
.from an older view of literature as including all kinds of written works worthy of study, to a different view that
led to a curriculum dominated by Romantic notions of genius and imagination, along with their Arnoldian
development as ‘high seriousness’” (12).
4
11
5
recommended they be viewed as servants not faculty. While graduate students are still treated as
apprentices in labor negotiations, the deductive field of scribal literacy broke up with social
diversification and the spread of print. The expansion of literacy and literacy studies is apparent in the
disappearance within decades of the syllogistic modes of reasoning that had for centuries distinguished
the learned by their ability to reason deductively from ancient traditions to individual experiences.
In the second chapter, I will connect with some of the developments that I explored more fully
in my history of English studies in Britain. In America, as in Britain, especially Scotland, the shift
from a deductive to an inductive epistemology as the paradigm for literate inquiry was fundamental to
the “new learning,” and what was popularly known at the time as “experimental religion.” The
transition in students’ writings from syllogistic disputations to forensic debates documents the historic
shift in epistemologies, technologies, and social relations that gave rise to the first college courses in
English literature, rhetoric, and composition. The introduction of modern cultural studies contributed
to a fundamental reformation of the trivium by what Hume characterized as “the science of human
nature,” as I discussed in the first volume of The Formation of College English. The transition from
Aristotelian logic and Ciceronian rhetoric to empirical reasoning and an unadorned style occurred
almost simultaneously in American, Scottish, and Irish colleges and English Dissenting academies, as
W.S. Howell has most fully detailed. These shifts in the three disciplines at the center of the liberal
arts mark the historic transition from classical to modern cultural studies. From the center of the
learned culture, the breakdown of the classical tradition was looked down upon as a literacy crisis
quite comparable to that which is bringing an end to modern literary studies. While the schematics of
scribal literacy provide the clearest example of shifts in literate technologies, the “new learning”
provides a complex but well defined model for reflecting on how literacy studies as a field of cultural
production was transformed by the emergence of modern psychologies and political economics.
The continuities and discontinuities between educational reforms in pre-revolutionary
American and post-Union Scotland are most pointedly apparent in the courses in rhetoric and moral
philosophy that became the culminating studies in the revolutionary curriculum as it began to
accommodate increasing numbers of lawyers and others not intent on becoming ministers. The college
at Philadelphia that Benjamin Franklin helped establish in 1755 included the first professorship of
English in America.6 At the newly founded colleges at Philadelphia and at Princeton, Scottish college
graduates taught courses in rhetoric, composition, and criticism in conjunction with moral philosophy
courses that combined civic humanist and natural law doctrines with the epistemology of Newton and
Locke and some practical advice on such legal and ethical matters as drawing up a contract. The
rhetoric and moral philosophy courses of John Witherspoon at Princeton are notable because he was a
classmate of Hugh Blair, a teacher of James Madison, and a signatory of the Declaration of
Independence. The College of Philadelphia had a similar significance, and a different sort as well. It
included a Young Ladies Academy that offered the first rhetoric courses for women. Priscilla Mason
used the opportunity of her graduation oration in 1793 (and its publication) to condemn “despotic”
men for denying women access to public forums to use their developing skills to speak for the public
good (qtd. in Connors 40-1; see also Kerber 221-2). Women were at the time testing the limits of
“republican motherhood” (Eldred and Mortensen).
The College at Philadelphia was the sort of hybrid institution that became common in
prosperous Midwestern towns in the antebellum period. As I will discuss in the third chapter, more
colleges were founded in the first half of the nineteenth century than in any other period in American
5
Cotton Mather’s ritual pronouncement at graduation and the decision of the Harvard Corporation on
the appeal of graduate tutors are reprinted in Richard Hofstadter and Wilson Smith’s American Higher
Education: A Documentary History along with related texts that will be cited parenthetically as reprinted there
(rptd. 18, 21-27. See also ***)
6
Franklin’s involvement in the establishment of the first professorship of English in America has all the
rich historical resonance of the fact that one the first professors of English in Britain was Adam Smith, who
taught rhetoric and belles lettres in the years that he was formalizing the political economy of consumer society.
Franklin also provided formative models for the reading public, and like Smith, his models were influenced by
civic humanism. According to Bender, “Franklin best represents the activist, pragmatic, and institution-founding
character of early American civic humanism,” which had an amateurish quality that proved vulnerable to rapid
expansion, geographical dispersal, and social stratification (“Erosion” 86).
12
history (see ***). Most were liberal arts colleges with denominational affiliations. Such colleges
commonly served as all-purpose institutions that offered secondary instruction along with a seminary,
female academy, and teacher’s institute (which were sometimes all but one and the same).7 With the
spread of common schools and the emergence of the first mass media (the penny press), the public
sphere expanded and became more diversified. Books ceased to be objects of devotion and became a
popular pastime, creating a “revolution in reading” (see Davidson). The establishment of a national
reading public and state-mandated schooling provided unprecedented numbers of positions for
journalists, lecturers, and teachers, enabling women, minorities, and working people to earn an
independent living by working with their minds instead of their hands. One of the first surveys of
American literature, Duyckinck and Duyckinck’s Cyclopedia of American Literature, observed in
1866 that “it is only of late that a class of authors by profession has begun to spring up” (v).8 Looking
back upon that development a half century later, Payne’s American Literary Criticism concluded that
“not until early in the nineteenth century did literature in America become what we commonly
understand by the term—a product in which artistic considerations prevail over all others” (4).
Teaching and writing for the periodical press were integrally involved with literary criticism until the
latter established itself as an academic specialization that was divorced from such popular concerns.
Payne published the first survey of college English departments, English in American
Universities, which I will discuss in chapter four on the Progressive era. I will examine how the
profession was configured in the two professional organizations that were established in this period. In
the Modern Language Association, professors organized themselves as researchers, while professors
made common cause with teachers in National Council of Teachers of English. From its start in 1883,
the MLA largely excluded literary journalists and practicing critics, for its members were more likely
to have academic affiliations than comparable disciplinary associations such as those formed by
historians and social scientists (Veysey 70). Within two decades, MLA consolidated its standing by
narrowing its purposes to advancing research. MLA ceased publishing the articles on pedagogy that
had comprised most of the first issues of PMLA, and it closed down its Pedagogy Section, which had
conducted national studies of working conditions and institutional trends in areas such as composition
(Graff 121). Fred Newton Scott and others with an interest in such broader issues formed NCTE to
organize coalitions with teachers. NCTE was an avowedly Progressive organization that drew most of
its college members from public institutions in the Midwest, while the leadership of MLA came
largely from elite institutions in the East (Graff 34-35). NCTE was specifically set up to provide a
representative assembly where teachers could consider collective action against oppressive workloads
and assessment priorities (see ***). NCTE is the largest association of English teachers in the world,
but as a teachers’ organization, it has not had the sort of professional standing that MLA has had
among research faculty, who control the graduate programs that produce the faculty who set the
priorities for departments in diverse institutions. The origins and development of these two
associations provide contrasting sets of possibilities for organizing our field of work.
As I will discuss in chapter five on recent developments in our field, the historical points
where teachers and professors have worked together often mark generative junctures where basic
changes have emerged in the teaching of English. One of those collaborations was the Dartmouth
Conference in 1966 that is often seen as a formative source for modern composition studies (Harris,
“After Dartmouth”). That conference opened with one of the leading rhetoricians of the period, Albert
Kitzhaber, giving a plenary entitled “What is English?” Kitzhaber reviewed the answers provided by a
7
Graff recognizes the merits of the antebellum literary networks but is finally dismissive of the
“classical college”: “From the point of view of subsequent literary criticism, the old college’s conception of
literary study as an extension of grammar, rhetoric, and elocution was merely evidence of hopeless
provincialism. But this modern view was formed only after literature had largely ceded to journalism and other
media whatever power it had had to shape public opinion” (50-1).
8
The evolution of English textbooks can be traced back to the eighteenth-century elocutionary
anthologies that preceded the McGuffey Eclectic Readers, which sold hundreds of millions of copies (see ***).
In the Antebellum Period, literature began to be studied in historical surveys such as Cleveland’s A Compendium
of English Literature that included selections along with biographical and historical commentary. An example of
how technologies shaped pedagogies is provided by how the paperback revolution of the 1920s and 30s gave rise
to the close reading pedagogies of New Criticism, which set itself in opposition to the massification of literacy.
13
decade of unequalled federal funding that had enabled professors and teachers to create regional
curriculum centers. From those efforts, Kitzhaber concluded that English studies should build in an
integrated and cumulative manner through studies of language, literature, and composition. While
Kitzhaber drew on some of the most broadly based research ever conducted on the teaching of
English, his approach did not prove to be compelling to the British and American teachers and
professors who gathered for three weeks at Dartmouth. His question got lost in the discussion when
James Britton responded by shifting the focus from what English should be to what students should be
doing. As Zebroski discussed in his response to Harris’s insightful analysis of how Dartmouth set out
a model for the scholarship of teaching, the historical impact of Dartmouth arose from how it shifted
disciplinary deliberations to focus on learning and writing processes. As evident in the influential
collaborations at Dartmouth, that focus has gained historic power when professors and teachers have
been pressed to work together by broad changes in literacy that raise basic questions about what
English studies are to be and do.
In the decade following Dartmouth, the profession saw a dramatic drop in its fortunes. In the
1970s, our profession experienced an historic collapse in BAs, PhDs, and tenure-track jobs, which
were all cut in half within the decade (see ***). As discussed in chapter five, English majors were
overshadowed by the rising popularity of more practical programs of study, including some that had
previously been housed in English departments, most notably communications. Research universities
continued to prosper, but disciplines became increasingly stratified along with the rest of the higher
educational system. 9 The “profession of literature” suffered along with other established professions
as the services of professionals began to be evaluated in market terms. 10 As Brint discusses in An Age
of Experts, professions came to be seen as merely commercial enterprises, while professionals
themselves began articulating their distinctive standing as simply a matter of expertise. Less emphasis
was given to the traditional idea that professions provide a public service that would be compromised
if they were not protected from market forces. This shift away from “social trustee professionalism”
was part of an historic “splintering of the professional stratum along functional, organizational, and
market lines.” While some professions continued to distinguish themselves by articulating “work as a
calling,” those with more direct use value tended to identify themselves as simply experts (Brint 5-7).
This same splintering of professional functions emerged within our own field in the divisive conflicts
between critics and compositionists in the 1980s (see ***). As becomes evident at such critical
junctures, the history of our profession turns out to be part of the broader history of professionalism, in
large part because English has traditionally played a fundamental role in credentialing professionals.
The history of college English is also integrally involved with the history of literacy, as we are
being pressed to acknowledge by changes in literacy that have traditionally been ignored by the
profession. While the profession has not considered research on the public standing of literature to be
part of its concerns, surveys of American reading habits have been undertaken by the National
Endowment for the Arts. Drawing upon census surveys conducted in 1982, 1992, and 2002, Reading
at Risk reported historic declines over the last three decades in the reading of books and works of
“literature” (including popular genres as well as poetry and drama). This definition of literature
excludes nonfiction in a way that may detract from the validity of the study, but which is consistent
with how literature has traditionally been defined in English departments. In 1982, 56.9% of
9
As Bender examines in his volume on the social histories of English and three other disciplines,
between 1950 and 1970 governmental expenditures on higher education rose more than ten fold (from $2.2 to
$23.4 billion), as compared to only 30% in the next forty years (21). As Kerr (The Great Transformation) and
others have discussed, the decades after mid century were historic not only because of the exponential growth
but also because American higher education became a much more stratified system, with community colleges
growing much faster between 1960 and 1980 (from 400,000 to 4 million) than higher education generally (from
3.5 to 12 million). As in the era when the research university replaced the liberal arts college as the paradigm for
American higher education, social diversification and educational stratification were integrally involved, and
they structured the work of English departments in many conflicting ways.
10
Siskin has examined how nineteenth-century print technologies generated forms of professional
expertise that included literature as a “newly restricted arena for the work of writing” that excluded “women
writers in startlingly systematic ways” (2). Literature became the disciplinary substructure that all areas of
literate expertise “had in common—the prerequisite for entering them as autonomous professional fields” (7). As
discussed in later chapters, this structure is breaking down along with other elements of modern professionalism.
14
respondents reported they had read a work of literature in the last year that had not been assigned in
school, while in 2002 that number dropped by 18% to 46.7%. The steepest decline was in the age
group who sits in our classrooms: 59.8% of 18-24 year olds reportedly did “literary reading” in 1982,
but only 42.8% said that they had done such reading in 2002. Women were 25% more likely than men
to report that they had read literature in the last year. While the reading of literature seems to have
dramatically declined, the writing of literature was actually found to have significant standing: 7% of
the respondents in the 2002 reported that they did creative writing, and thirteen percent said that they
had taken a creative writing course. That would add up to some twenty-seven million Americans.
Nine percent of the respondents reported having used the internet to read and research literature.
Like a Nation at Risk twenty years earlier, Reading at Risk was meant to energize the literate
by underlining deepening threats to their values. Unlike scholarly organizations such as MLA that
have long bewailed declines in the learning and literacy, NEA took public action to intervene in a
locally situated and nationally orchestrated way. NEA launched “the Big Read,” a national initiative
that enlisted more than 500 communities in organizing reading groups to focus on a selected literary
work. This initiative was seen to have contributed to the turnaround in “literary reading” that was
reported in Reading on the Rise: A New Chapter in American Literacy in 2009: while the respondents
who stated that they had read a poem, novel, play, or story in the last year dropped by 14% between
1992 and 2002, between 2002 and 2008, that number rose 7% (with 54% reporting they had done
literary reading in 1992, 46.7% in 2002, and 50.2% in 2008) (4). Even with that upturn, the 2008
results were still almost 15% lower than the percentage of respondents who reported they read
literature in 1982 (59.8%). The increase may also have been due to changes in the survey items, for the
2008 study gave more attention to reading online, with 15% of the respondents reporting that they read
literature on line. These trends highlight developments that need to be considered if we are to make
productive use of the historic changes that confront English departments. Literary reading as clearly
declined in dramatic ways in recent decades. If we are to intervene in that decline, we are going to
have to develop much more broadly engaged coalitions with librarians, teachers, and reading and
writing groups in our local communities, and toward that end, we are going to have to adopt a more
pragmatic engagement with the potentials of interactive technologies. Those technologies are
fundamental to the historical shift from reading to writing that we can witness every day in virtually
any public place, including the virtual public places that we increasingly inhabit.
These reports and the other surveys that I will cite in later chapters provide benchmarks for
reflecting upon how the standing of English departments has been undercut by changes in literacy that
the profession has tended to discount. The debilitating impact of this tendency has been compounded
by the profession’s failure to invest its intellectual capital in its institutional work. This failure is
epitomized by an equation of English studies with literary studies, in the modern sense of that term.
English departments in elite universities have been insulated from broader changes in literacy and
education, and such departments have also been isolated from the partnerships that might enable the
discipline to respond to those changes. Broadly based departments of English include a rich array of
applied linguists, English education specialists, compositionists, journalists, creative writers, and
scholars involved with ethnic, media, and gender studies. We need a vision of the discipline that
includes the expansive possibilities of these areas of study. Literacy studies provides a model that
encompasses research and teaching in all four corners of our field. The basic distinction between
teachers and researchers is fundamentally disorienting because we are all teachers. The real question is
whether our programs of study will attend to that fact. As I have tried to set out in this introduction,
insofar as the profession has not taken this basic reality into account, it has incapacitated the discipline
by misrepresenting what practitioners do. Looking at our history from the bottom up can help us think
through our disciplinary capacities in more productive ways. Given our deepening labor problems and
the expanding changes in literacy that confront us, we need to reassess our historical alternatives in
order to develop a more productive engagement with our rich institutional base. We have an expansive
powerbase, and we need to invest more of our collective intellectual energies in exploring how to
harness the power of what we do.
15
CHAPTER ONE
LEARNING AND THE LEARNED IN COLONIAL NEW ENGLAND
By the power of eloquence, ould truth receivs new habit . . . . The same verity is again & again
perhaps set before the same guests, but drest and disht up after a new manner, & every manner
season'd so well that the intellectuall parts may . . . [provide] fresh nourishing virtue. (“Prayse
of Eloquence” [1650] by Michael Wigglesworth 9)
We are now in circumstances similar to those which produced the greatest orators of ancient
days. . . . . Our governments are popular. The arts and sciences are fast advancing among us,
and our present difficult situation urges us to every effort for our political safety. These
considerations should lead us to cultivate this noble art, and cannot fail to produce men who,
pleading our great American cause, shall consume all before them, with the ardent blaze of
Demosthenes, or the wide spreading flame of a Tully. (“On Ancient Eloquence” [1775] by
Thomas Ennals 3)
These student orations on the virtues of rhetoric highlight several of the converging textual,
epistemological, and political changes that shaped the first century of English studies in American
colleges. Wigglesworth's oration seems rather quaint, and not just because he wrote before English
was standardized by print. His notebooks show that he learned to define eloquence as the art of
dressing up "ould truth" in a new style from reading Peter Ramus. Such assumptions were consistent
with the duties that seventeenth-century college graduates assumed as preachers of virtue in isolated
communities. While Wigglesworth's oration has a timeless quality that ironically makes it feel quite
dated, Ennals spoke directly to the politics of his time. Before a commencement audience that
included the Continental Congressmen assembled in Philadelphia, Ennals invoked the civic virtues of
rhetoric in order to strengthen the public authority of the liberally educated in an era of revolutionary
change. The religious and political divisions of the latter half of the eighteenth century helped created
a need for graduates who were prepared to speak and write for diverse audiences. Colleges responded
by introducing forensic debates to prepare students to speak to contemporary issues.
From the founding of Harvard until the establishment of a half dozen colleges a century later,
the colonial curriculum maintained the emphasis on deductive reasoning in an ancient language that
had long prevailed in Britain and Europe. The rhetorical dynamics of literacy and literacy studies
changed as the colonies gave rise to a reading public that drew upon republican doctrines to constitute
a national identity. The literate were challenged to persuade audiences that for the first time had
choices to make in which church to attend and what to read. In response to these challenges, rhetoric
came to replace logic as the paragon for literate inquiry in the college curriculum, and the prevailing
conception of literature shifted from a religious to an oratorical framework. The transition from
religious to oratorical literature was part of the response to the expansion of literacy and the
diversification of the literate, most notably the rising numbers of graduates who went into secular
careers. The increasing access to books and magazines broke down the confines of the scribal
curriculum, which had compensated for the lack of books by relying on classroom recitations and
declamations. These oral modes of instruction and the deductive mindset of Scholasticism were
consistent with the didactic sermons that college graduates would preach to their isolated
congregations of fellow believers, while the changes in literacy and literacy studies in the middle of
the eighteenth century were part of the response to the debates over individual religious and political
rights that began with the Great Awakening of populist evangelism in the 1740s.
The earliest description that we have of the scope and purpose of the American college
curriculum is provided by New England's First Fruits, which was published in London in 1643 to
enlist support for the new college: “After God had carried us safe to New England, . . . One of the next
things we longed for, and looked after was to advance Learning and perpetuate it to Posterity;
dreading to leave an illiterate Ministery to the Churches, when our present Ministers shall lie in the
Dust” (6). To prepare the literate to preach and teach the Word, Harvard students participated in
monthly "declamations in Latine and Greeke, and Disputations Logicall and Philosophicall” to display
16
their mastery of the “tongues and Arts” before a "publique" audience of "Magistrates, Ministers, and
other Schollars" (7). "Magistrates" and other laymen sat on the boards that incorporated colleges, as
was common in Scotland but not England. Harvard is in fact the oldest American corporation
operating under its original charter.11
Colonial colleges lacked the endowments of an Oxford or Cambridge and had to rely on
public grants and donations. This dependence made American colleges more responsive to broader
changes in education and literacy than the more insulated English universities. New Englanders looked
to public education to perpetuate their values amidst the perceived barbarism of the frontier, as
Bernard Bailyn has discussed. Mandatory public education was instituted with the first Massachusetts
School Law of 1647. Up to the middle of the eighteenth century, most students became clergymen in
communities where they were often the only college graduates. Concerns that ministers would be too
“illiterate” to teach the young prompted the establishment of English exercises as part of the program
of studies sketched out in New England’s First Fruits. Anxieties about public education deepened with
the social diversification and political agitation of the latter half of the eighteenth century, as will be
discussed in the next chapter (see Parrillo).
The scribal literacy of the New England colonies was introspective but not expansive. In the
classroom as in society more generally, information was largely transmitted through face to face
conversations that cemented social hierarchies. Most people only read a few devotional texts that were
learned by heart. Graduates were taught how to speak to such communities through a regime of
recitations and disputations that required students to reduce the few available books to compendia that
could be memorized and recited. These scribal methods of instruction enacted a deductive mode of
learning that upheld the syllogism as the paradigm for human reasoning and moral judgment, with
individuals taught to deduce their individual duties from traditional precepts. Religious uniformity
broke up with the popular debates of the revolutionary period. Those debates built the circulation of
the newspapers and magazines that came to provide alternative sources of information. Social
diversification and the expansion of print literacy contributed to the emergence of what was known as
the “new learning,” which looked to science for a methodology that was often less experimental than
experiential. After serving for centuries as the epitome of learned inquiry, syllogistic disputations in
Latin were replaced by forensic disputations in English in the decades between the Great Awakening
and the American Revolution. These disputations were identified with a more inductive model of
reasoning from experience. The departure from the deductive mindset of Scholasticism provides an
epistemological benchmark for assessing how literacy studies changed with the breakdown of the
scribal information economies that characterized colonial communities, and the curriculum that
prepared graduates to speak to them.
College English studies emerged from the growth of the periodical press and the
diversification of viewpoints that it helped to legitimate. As at other junctures in the history of the
teaching of English, literacy and the literate evolved in tandem with literacy studies. I will trace out
that evolution by beginning with the covenanting tradition that clergymen invoked to claim the
authority to speak for the public. The covenanting tradition lost its unifying authority as increasing
numbers of people grew up outside the church. This development is documented in Kenneth
Lockridge’s ethnographic study of Dedham, Massachusetts, which I will use as a case study in how
social diversification led to a more rhetorical stance on literacy. 12 In the second section, I will sketch
11
In his account of the development of American higher education as a competitive marketplace, Clark
Kerr looks back to the adoption of Scottish governance structures as fundamental to the colonial colleges’
“autonomy, diversity, flexibility, and competitiveness” (xii).
12
Lockridge’s study aptly complements his better known research on colonial literacy. Lockridge’s
Literacy in Colonial New England criticizes the progressivist assumption that print spread an optimistic faith in
individual enterprise that became an instrumental part of American republicanism. However, Lockridge
maintains that when societies modernize, literacy is often "intimately involved in an educational subprocess
which enhances the changes in attitudes already encouraged by general changes in society. In both instances, the
results are a more active, instrumental, optimistic, and widely aware consciousness particularly associated with
literacy" (29). Lockridge criticizes Bailyn’s argument that anxieties about the frontier experience prompted an
intense concern for education, but Bailyn’s analysis has served as a point of reference for later research on
schooling and literacy in the colonial period (see Grubb).
17
out a parallel transition in the curriculum. Literacy was traditionally acquired in the virtual absence of
books by having individuals inscribe all that was deemed to be worth remembering in orderly
hierarchies that could be dictated and recited. Like the rural communities that students graduated into,
the scribal curriculum was a self-contained space, a narrow space encompassed by the “circle of
learning” that included all that could be memorized by a well-versed student (Samuel Johnson,
Elementa Philosophia viii). In the third section, I will discuss how this well enclosed field of cultural
production was broken up by the debates over individual rights that began to spread through the
popular press during the Great Awakening. In the fourth section of this chapter, I will examine how
the growth of the periodical press contributed to the introduction of English courses in the decades
between the Great Awakening and American Revolution. I will conclude this chapter by relating these
epistemological and social changes in literacy and literacy studies to a formative development in the
political economy of American higher education—the distinction of private colleges from other
institutions of public education. That distinction would become fundamental to the American higher
education market, and to the elaboration of related distinctions within American civil society, most
notably the ideology of professionalism.
The Corporation on the Hill
The polity of New England communities was shaped by the covenanting tradition. New
Englanders were well versed in the idea they had formed a pact with God that bestowed certain rights
and duties upon them. This idea was a common them in sermons and religious works, and it was
woven into the contractual relations of pastors and other elected officials with the members of the elect
who had voted for them. In the covenanting tradition, such social contracts were not understood to be
a compact between autonomous individuals so much as an enactment of the hierarchical nature of the
providential order. The social contract set out a model for how the literate understood their relations to
the public. A decade before disembarking at Massachusetts Bay, Governor John Winthrop preached a
lay sermon to his Puritan followers that deduced their duties as citizens in the “city upon the hill” from
the assumption that "God Almighty in His most holy and wise providence hath so disposed of the
condition of mankind as in all times some must be rich, some poor; some high and eminent in power
and dignity, others mean and in subjection" (Miller, American Puritans 79). As a model for the
political relations of the literate and the public, the social contract was less concerned with individual
rights than with the obligations that individuals were to deduce from received hierarchies. This aspect
of the social compact is important to underline because we tend to assume that natural rights doctrines
served to justify individual equality, while such doctrines would traditionally have been identified with
hierarchies founded on the subordination of those who were seen as naturally inferior
In principle and in practice, the covenanting tradition limited the public to those who shared a
faith in God's covenant with the saved. In many communities, church membership was limited to those
who had demonstrated their personal salvation with a conversion narrative that recounted the
introspections that led to their accepting Christ's saving grace. If an individual delivered a rendition of
the religious experience that was consistent with the experience of the members of the church, they
voted to accept the person and the membership role was signed. Such membership was required of all
voters in Massachusetts. Congregationalist churches were largely autonomous and ordained their own
ministers, whose authority rested on their contract with their community. While Congregationalism
created considerable communal independence, such autonomy was not extended to individuals, and
especially not to individuals who challenged the community’s guiding sense of itself.13
Nonconformists such as the Quakers were ostracized, tortured, and even executed as a matter of
principle. The irony at the center of America’s idealized democratic traditions is that Puritans were
Dissenters who could not tolerate dissent. As Patricia Roberts-Miller has discussed, the “paradoxical”
democracy of Puritan New England is the American archetype for a deliberative public that could only
make sense of its differences by excluding them as unreasonable and therefore intolerable.
13
As Perry Miller stressed, the Puritans "were in no sense pioneers of religious liberty, and when their
English counterparts [under Cromwell] went whoring after this strange perversion of political orthodoxy, they
resolved to stand all the more resolutely in New England for an absolute uniformity, for a rigorous suppression
of all Dissent, by capital punishment if necessary" (American Puritans 94).
18
The public sphere of the local assembly was understood to be a closed space where reasonable
people could speak from shared assumptions to advance common needs. In such forums, according to
Roberts-Miller, “only the righteous have rights” (78). True believers do not engage in debates with the
unorthodox because the truth is not open to question. Clergy did not generally try to persuade those
doomed to be damned but spoke as a prophetic “voice in the wilderness” against the corruptions of
outsiders (63). The religious literature of the time provided a template for interpreting the smallest
details of daily life as signs of providence. Puritan literature had “a palimpsest quality” that documents
the rich interpretive frameworks of the literate mentality of the time (Roberts-Miller 123). A citizen
was envisioned to be a free-holder who possessed land, but in much of New England, land was
granted not to individuals but to groups that incorporated as towns. A congregation would be formed,
and it would become the nucleus for the corporation. The fabled New England town meetings were
often held in the local church and presided over by its members.
Social diversification soon began to fragment these closed communities. A detailed sense of
this process is provided by Lockridge's history of a single colonial town, Dedham, founded ten miles
southwest of Boston in 1636 on a two hundred square mile grant given to about thirty middle-class
families. The founders signed a contract that provided for internal mediation of conflicts. The
"contrary minded" were to be excluded, in part by restricting the sale of land to outsiders. Land was
distributed disproportionately according to tacitly accepted differences in "rank and quality" (5, 8).
Several members were chosen to begin the process of collaborative soul searching to constitute the
church, and seventy percent of the community became members. Rather than dividing up the land into
autonomous farms, a closely-knit town was established, and fewer than 3000 acres was divvied up in
the first twenty years. Into the eighteenth century the town remained an isolated middle-class farm
community. Dedham functioned as "a self-governing corporation of the saved" (24). However, by the
second quarter of the eighteenth century, four separate towns had been set up. Land reserves were
exhausted, and population growth intensified the pressures on increasingly contested social
hierarchies. Instead of acceding to the decisions of the elected “Select Men,” town meetings became a
forum for factions maneuvering to establish their own churches and schools. When community
deliberations failed, such groups turned to the courts (Lockridge 135). Faced with such developments,
it is understandable that the educated began to take new interest in mastering the art of public debate.
Education was challenged to compensate for the increasing numbers of people who were
growing up unversed in religious literature. As early as 1670 most people in Dedham were no longer
members of the church. Because only members could have their children baptized, just forty percent of
children were being baptized. Many who were baptized failed to come before the congregation to bare
their souls with a conversion narrative. Pressed to accommodate increasing numbers of individuals
who were not orthodox believers, towns such as Dedham could no longer function as "closed
corporate communities" that dealt with diversity by excluding nonbelievers (Lockridge 81). The
breakdown of religious conformity increased colonials’ concern for the educational upbringing of the
rising generation. This concern was well founded, for research suggests that while white immigrants
were more literate than the communities they had left behind, literacy tended to decline among the
children and grandchildren of immigrants as a result of migration to less settled areas (see Kaestle and
Grubb). While larger towns had been required by Massachusetts law to establish a grammar school,
laws were tightened and more rigorously enforced in the last decades of the century. Small town
schools were generally presided over by the local clergyman or his assistant, who taught students to
recite religious platitudes along with the rudiments of literacy. Students might then move on to a
textbook such the New England Primer, which was known as "the little Bible of New England"
(Meriwether 19). However, even grammar schools required few books because students generally
drew up their own grammars and lexicons from recitations.
Such were the ideological and institutional contexts within which scribal literacy functioned.
New England was the most intensely literate area of the colonies. In seventeenth-century New
England, about sixty percent of adult males were literate (fifty percent higher than England's literacy
rate of forty percent). While American women were about half as likely to be literate as men, such
high literacy levels were only equaled in areas such as Scotland, Sweden, and Switzerland that shared
the Puritans' commitment to literate devotion. Literacy was closely tied to religion, as is evident in the
fact the literacy rates of women depended less on the wealth and education of their parents than on
19
whether they were active church members (Graff, Legacies 163-5). However, even in New England,
literacy remained largely scribal until the Great Awakening in the 1740s. Most New England
households included only a few books such as a Bible, an almanac, and a work of popular religious
literature such as Pilgrim's Progress. Most people read but a few sacred texts and wrote an occasional
letter, deed, or contract, with sermons the most influential form of public discourse. In such
communities, literacy tended to perpetuate a pietistic reverence for received beliefs. Print functioned
as "a technology of the self" that worked in a deductive manner to impress the authority of the divine
Word on the individual psyche through the process of learning by heart (Warner 19-20).
This scribal information economy was an "economy of scarcity" that followed "a hierarchical
diffusion pattern,” according to Brown’s Knowledge Is Power: The Diffusion of Information in Early
America (280). Information was transmitted through face-to-face conversations that reinforced the
conversants’ respect for their respective ranks. Signs of deference became part of the transaction,
strengthening communal hierarchies by reinforcing the authority of those who could presume to know
better because they circulated more widely within the community and beyond it. In many
communities, the minister was the only one with a college degree or library, and he often
corresponded with his former classmates and joined with them as a town representative in regional
associations. Such networks strengthened the cultural authority of the literate by making their learning
rhetorically influential in daily life and political relations.
Into the middle of the eighteenth century, most college graduates exercised public authority
from the pulpit, preaching didactic sermons that deduced individuals' obligations from biblical truths.
The purpose was not to persuade the unconverted but to teach the faithful because Puritans assumed
that people either are or are not elected for salvation. Learned sermons aimed at the converted
remained the norm up to the Great Awakening of popular evangelism that prompted ministers such as
Jonathan Edwards to attempt to persuade broader audiences that they were "sinners in the hands of an
angry God." Individuals had long been taught to look inward to seek signs that they had received grace
and been selected to the elect, which would be visible to others in the good done by them and to them.
Of course any individual was free not to sign a covenant with God—free to be excluded and damned.
The very idea that one could achieve grace by seeking it was a heresy— Arminianism, which
according to Hofstadter was "a curse word as full of resonance as the word communism has become to
modern Americans" (America 227). Individuals monitored their thoughts and interactions, searching
for signs of grace, and looking to religious literature to help them deduce whether their experiences
were marked by such signs. Sacred literature was studied by most people for introspective devotions,
but in the hands of ministers, books were generally used to lead public devotions to the Word.14
The Great Awakening of popular evangelism had its broadest impact on the unchurched and
uneducated. These groups increased as the population expanded to frontier communities that lacked
preachers to teach them. Traveling evangelists destabilized communal hierarchies by encouraging the
alienated to leave the congregations of uninspiring clerics. The traditionally uncontested authority of
the literate was further undermined when evangelists began to found their own colleges. Like new
churches, these colleges gave people the power to choose among competing institutions. Some
evangelicals became ambivalent about this power as the changes they set out began to undermine the
authority of clerics by fostering popular religious divisions. These divisions undercut the ability of
churches to represent themselves as public institutions. As in Dedham, the unchurched became more
organized and politically active. This trend was advanced in Massachusetts and other colonies by the
reduction of property requirements on voting. In the third quarter of the century the percentage of adult
white males who could vote in a town such as Dedham rose from forty to seventy percent (see also
Katherine Brown). This expansion of the electorate challenged the educated to learn how to speak
persuasively to audiences that might not share a traditional set of assumptions. Higher education had
14
A record of an influential educator's reading is provided by Samuel Johnson's "Catalogue" of the
books he read after he left his tutorship at Yale in 1719, through his years as a country parson, and then as the
first president of King's College (Columbia) in 1754. Johnson read widely in the natural law tradition (Grotius
and Pufendorf), the “new learning” (Newton, Bacon, Locke, and Berkeley), Scottish moral philosophers (Hume,
Hutcheson, and Turnbull), and authors on rhetoric and logic ranging from Cicero and Quintilian to the Port
Royalists and Isaac Watts. Johnson also read Milton, Pope, Rollin, and periodical literature such as the
Spectator, American Magazine, and "several of the Reviews" (Works 1:497).
20
been charged with preparing the literate to represent the public, but as modes of representation became
more contested, rhetoric came to replace logic at the pinnacle of literacy studies.
The "Circle of Learning" within the Curriculum
The colonial curriculum was a scribal information economy much like those that students
would enter upon graduation. Information was acquired and perpetuated orally through a daily regime
of dictations, recitations, declamations, and disputations. Students had limited access to books.
Learning by rote transmitted knowledge in a tacit and unreflective manner. When a text is “learned by
heart,” time and energy are invested in memorizing key phrases, patterns, and rhythms. Little attention
tends to be paid to exploring the applications or implications of the ideas. This emphasis on rote
mastery was consistent with a deductive mindset that assumed that one reasoned from traditional
assumptions to individual applications.
This epistemology was shaped by the need to schematize all areas of study in categorical
terms so that they could be remembered. "The whole circle of learning" was charted by Samuel
Johnson in his notebooks so that he could memorize all he needed to know (see Johnson, Elementa
viii; also Fiering). Following the original division of learning into the "tongues and arts" in New
England's First Fruits in 1643, commencement theses at Harvard were divided into philosophical and
philological theses, with the former including ethics, physics, and metaphysics and the latter listing
theses under grammar, logic, and rhetoric. In 1653 this basic dichotomy was dropped, metaphysics
was replaced by mathematics, and a new category was added: technologicae, which was charged with
mapping out disciplines upon the faculties of the mind as a microcosm for the providential order. This
assumption that the workings of the mind followed the natural laws that governed the knowable world
was the center point for the circle of knowledge encompassed in the curriculum. From that point,
students drew axes out to other categorical propositions from which they were to deduce theses in all
areas of study. Students demonstrated their mastery of these schematics by disputing theses in Latin in
a syllogistic manner to show that they had acquired learned languages and Scholastic commonplaces
that had remained largely "unchanged from the days of Abelard" (Morison, Seventeenth-Century
Harvard 1:143).
For almost a century from the original three-year program of study set out in New England's
First Fruits, the curriculum retained its basic emphasis on ancient languages and modes of reasoning.
All three years included studies in ancient languages and divinity. The first year also included logic
and physics, and the second year began the studies of ethics and politics, with the third year devoted to
arithmetic, geometry and astronomy. Throughout their studies, students were tested through a regular
program of disputations and declamations. Disputations made syllogistic reasoning the paradigm for
all learned inquiry, but they eventually evolved into modern modes of examination through the
inclusion of a moderator who concluded by questioning the disputants. These examinations would
eclipse the ritualized disputation itself (see Walsh 313). Since these disputations and declamations
were traditionally conducted in Latin, they supported the interdisciplinary standing of learned
languages. As noted in the Laws of Harvard in 1646, students were officially forbidden to speak in
"their mother Tongue except that in publick exercises of Oratory or such like, they be called to make
them in English" (Hofstadter and Smith 9). Such requirements were repeated in college laws until
1734 at Harvard and until 1774 at Yale. However, even before they lapsed, it is notable that Harvard
diverged from British universities in having formal provisions for public exercises in English.
In assessing the colonial curriculum, and its successors, we need to acknowledge that official
representations of programs of study may not represent what was actually taught. Even before the
requirement on speaking Latin was omitted from the college laws, it may not have been followed in
the classroom, or even on official occasions. College laws also required that to gain admission
students had to demonstrate that they could use Latin extemporaneously and translate selections from
Greek. Cicero, the Bible, and occasionally Virgil are cited in such requirements through the middle of
the eighteenth century. Entrance exams would have been quite demanding if students were actually
expected to translate and explicate unfamiliar Greek and Latin passages. However, students were
allowed to enter without any Greek if they came from areas without grammar schools (which included
most of colonial America at the time). Some laws go beyond citing a handful of texts to specify the
parts that would be examined, perhaps so students could recite them by rote (see, for example,
21
Hofstadter and Smith 117). In contrast with official requirements, private accounts suggest that
students were often admitted with a rote knowledge of the core texts, with many students never
learning to use Latin extemporaneously—as all students were officially required to do.15 Students’
notebooks suggest that Latin was less commonly used in classrooms from the beginning of the
eighteenth century.
Within the narrow range of subjects set out in formal curricula, students read intensively and
not extensively, in part because they had few books to read. Generally only juniors, seniors, masters,
and faculty could borrow books from the library. Books were fragile and precious, and it was
generally assumed that students could be told what they needed to learn. Colonial college libraries
were quite limited, particularly on more modern materials, until more frequent book shipments began
to arrive in the eighteenth century. Pivotal texts such as Bacon's Advancement of Learning and Locke's
Essay Concerning Human Understanding could be found in college libraries, but that does not mean
that a student could find them there. Bacon's treatise was in the library bequeathed by John Harvard in
1638, and Locke's Essay was sent to Yale in 1714, and to Harvard by 1725. However, Locke was read
mostly in an abridgement in the popular Young Students Library. When Samuel Johnson discovered a
copy of the Advancement of Learning after graduating from Harvard in 1714, he thought he had found
"perhaps the only copy in the country" and sweepingly concluded that "nobody knew its value."
Johnson observed that there were no “books of learning to be had in those times under a 100 or 150
years old such as the first settlers of the country brought” (Samuel Johnson 1:7). The fact that a highly
literate graduate such as Johnson thought that Bacon was his discovery alone provides a telling
example of what students actually read and discussed at Harvard.
As a tutor at Yale in 1717, Johnson excitedly introduced the works of Bacon and Locke to his
students. Colleges relied on recent graduates such as Johnson as tutors because there were few if any
professors other than the president. Much like a graduate assistantship today, a tutorship was generally
held for a short time—two and a half years on average in the latter half of the seventeenth century at
Harvard, rising a century later to nine years at Harvard and three at Yale (Herbst, Crisis 17; Moore
41). When tutors attempted to gain seats as teaching faculty on the Harvard Corporation in the first
quarter of the eighteenth century, the administration responded that they should be grouped with the
servants and not the faculty (see Hofstadter and Smith 21-7).
Before discovering the new learning, Johnson had learned in the traditional way, by compiling
"synopses" of "scholastic systems" into encyclopedic tables (Samuel Johnson 1:6). Such student
compositions document the scribal modes of learning of the time. A popular textbook such as
Legrand's Entire Body of Philosophy was valued for how neatly it summarized all that needed to be
known about logic, theology, physics, metaphysics, ethics, and aesthetics. Instructors and students
distilled such surveys down still further to compose compendia, as in William Brattle's "Compendium
of Logick according to the Modern Phylosophers, Extracted from Legrand and others theire Systems,"
which circulated at Harvard for almost a century after he was tutor and fellow from 1685 to 1717. The
transmission of the text may well be more notable than the outmoded ideas that it contained.16 Several
students' notes in English remain from Brattle's lectures in the first decade of the eighteenth century.
As printed textbooks became more common, the lectures were published in 1750—over thirty years
after he had quit teaching and his derivative ideas had long been superseded. The tacitly perpetuated
power of these ancient doctrines is evident in how a Latin manuscript version of Brattle’s lectures was
passed down from one generation to the next until at least 1791, including one set of notes bearing the
comment that "This compend of Logic by the Rev'd Wm. Brattle of Cambridge was long recited in
Harvard.” That sharply underlined word suggests that at least one student recognized that the text had
continued to be used long after it had outlasted its usefulness.
15
Meriwether concluded that there is "no evidence" that students spoke Latin "colloquially" or that
many could write it with "any degree of ease or correctness." (Meriwether 92-4). The Latin of the college laws is
itself sometimes corrupt. Letters from professors such as Francis Alison complained that students were admitted
"who recite the classics by rote” and could not write any Latin (Letter to Ezra Stiles, May 27, 1759 MS 4).
16
As in theses on technologicae, Brattle's Logic identifies ethics with logic by a shared concern for
correcting "mans mind.” Deductive reasoning is held up as the paragon that enables people to achieve certainty,
while sensory perceptions are associated with error and deceit.
22
As Brattle's Logic documents, the scribal form of our first college textbooks was as important
as the ideas they contained. Such painstakingly copied compendia served as a substitute for the books
themselves. Within the scribal world of a colonial college, such compendia were often not transcribed
from a book but from a lecturer's rendering, which was then recited by students and their successors,
often for several generations, and sometimes repeatedly by the same student in the same year to ensure
that the text was memorized. These textbooks were reduced to commonplaces to be repeated in
declamations and disputations. Students were often required to submit their commonplace book as
well as their declamations, orations, and disputations to have their compositions corrected by tutors.
Originality was obviously not what teachers looked for. Commonplace books were meant to be
faithful summaries of the arguments of readings, sermons, and other students' declamations. Into the
eighteenth century, such commonplace themes were read before the assembled college in the chapel as
part of the program of evening exercises because it was assumed that the preservation and
transmission of learning entailed reciting known truths that had been reduced to a regular system. In
these ways, students came to understand learning as a process of dutifully inscribing, internalizing,
and performing received truths rendered into orderly hierarchies
At commencement, students demonstrated their ability to deduce individual obligations from
traditional assumptions in learned languages, and then they were ceremoniously initiated into the
literate community gathered for the occasion. As translated by Cotton Mather, the pronouncement at
commencement was "I admit you to the first degree in Arts, that is to say, to the privilege of
responding in debate, according to the custom of the English Universities; and I deliver to you this
book, with the privilege of reading in public, in such profession as you shall select, as soon as you are
summoned to that duty" (Hofstadter and Smith 18). After being ceremoniously given a book to
symbolize their right to read to the public, graduates were "summoned" by a congregation. Or, if they
stayed on to tutor, they could earn a Master’s degree by revising one of their compendia into a
polished system, which served as the scribal predecessors to modern graduate theses. Drawing up a
"system or synopsis" was first noted as a requirement of MA candidates in New England's First Fruits.
The Harvard Laws of 1734 stated that candidates had to draw up "A Common Place, or Synopsis of
any of the Arts and Sciences and be ready to defend this Theses." As in the classroom, this research
was not traditionally intended to generate new knowledge.
From the founding of Harvard through the middle of the eighteenth century, syllogistic
disputations remained the principal mode of learning throughout the program of studies, which
culminated with weekly disputations in the final year. The respondent in a disputation composed a
response to a question set by the instructor, carefully clarifying the terms and narrowing the scope of
reference and then setting out his thesis in a syllogism, usually a categorical one. One or more
opponents then responded by attacking the definition of terms or the forms of reasoning, and the
respondent then defended his theses with further syllogisms and critiques of his opponent's reasoning.
The instructor served as moderator and concluded the disputation by correcting errors, asking
questions, and providing the definitive answer. Such ritualized modes of inquiry enshrined the idea
that a literate person was aut logicus aut nullus, "either logician or nothing." Logic functioned as “the
organon of the soul” to provide a model for learning and the learned (G. Stanley Hall 148). According
to Bartholomew Keckerman's popular guide, syllogistic disputations required a "sacred and
theological spirit" to conduct the search for the truth with deference to rules that were "political and
ethical" as well as logical (translated in Meriwether 238). According to Fiering, Scholastic casuists had
established that the conscience reasoned deductively from major premises supplied by natural reason
to individual obligations. In the first decades of the eighteenth century, the syllogism ceased to serve
as the model of logical reasoning and moral judgment. In 1726 Cotton Mather advised ministers that
"the most valuable thing in Logic, and the very Termination of it, is the Doctrine of Syllogisms.”
Because he had come to value the new learning, he added that "it is notorious,” however, that “all
Syllogizing is only to confirm you in a Truth which you already the owner of" (qtd. in Ota 26).
Mather's predecessors would not have disagreed, but they would have seen such an assessment as a
confirmation and not a repudiation of the values of syllogistic reasoning.
Within a scribal curriculum dominated by the logic of syllogistic disputations in a dead
language, rhetoric was reduced to an easily memorized list of schemes and tropes that could be used to
embellish commonplaces. Invention and even arrangement had been allotted to logic by Ramus, and
23
Ramistic works on rhetoric remained predominant into the first quarter of the eighteenth century
according to the most detailed commentator on rhetorical studies in the colonial period, Warren
Guthrie. According to Guthrie, the two most commonly cited stylistic rhetorics were William Dugard's
Rhetorices Elementa, a catechism of less than fifty pages on delivery and figures of style and thought,
and Thomas Farnaby's Index Rhetoricus, a fuller and more classically oriented but still predominantly
figurist rhetoric. Both were cited as the texts in rhetoric at Harvard as late as the laws of 1723. Most
accounts of seventeenth and early eighteenth-century rhetorical study in America agree with Guthrie's
characterization of it as a "period of rhetorical decadence" ("Colonial" 48). The first thesis at Harvard
to treat rhetoric as the art of civic discourse rather than stylistic embellishment was in 1717, the same
year that a thesis criticizing syllogistic reasoning was delivered (see Perrin 53, Guthrie, Development
of Rhetorical Theory 31; and Potter, Debating 19-21).
The Ramistic compartmentalization of the curriculum enabled Calvinists to be classicists
without having to confront the contradiction between their studies in the humanities and their belief in
humanity's fallen nature. A practical art like rhetoric could readily be appropriated for Calvinist
purposes, but rhetoric's identification with the civic concerns of moral philosophy presented a
competing set of values. Such contradictions could be contained by confining the ancients to social
duties and upholding the Bible as the authority on humanity's higher obligations. In the last two
decades of the seventeenth century, Scholastic texts were replaced by works that set out the more
optimistic view of natural reason associated with Newton and Descartes. According to Fiering, the
convergence of "evangelical pietism and scientific naturalism" made it increasingly difficult to
maintain that all moral judgments could be deduced from biblical truths (Moral Philosophy 17).
Calvinist introspections on one's state of grace began to connect with writings on “experimental
religion” as providential naturalism became more Newtonian. These generative contradictions came to
the fore in the study of moral philosophy. The rise of moral philosophy in the curriculum was pivotal
to the transition from deductions from established beliefs to inductive inquiries that looked to
experience as a source of knowledge. Moral philosophy had long been taught in the second or third
year after the foundational first-year course in logic, but moral philosophy came to challenge divinity
as the concluding emphasis of the college curriculum in the latter half of the eighteenth century.
At Harvard, the development of the new learning into a new pedagogy can be dated from the
arrival in 1686 of Charles Morton, who had emigrated to escape prosecution for running the influential
Dissenting academy where Daniel Defoe was educated (see Miller, Formation). As professor and vicepresident, Morton was instrumental in introducing new modes of learning at Harvard, and he links that
development with the reforms in the dissenting academies that supported the teaching of English.
Continuing the innovations that had made his academy a center of reform, Morton introduced a
Newtonian approach to natural and moral philosophy by instituting a course of “experimental” studies
of the physical and moral sciences much like those being instituted by Scots and Dissenters. As in his
own academy, Morton taught entirely in English in the assumption that learning should be accessible
to those of "either sex,” even those who had not acquired “the Command of Learned Languages" (qtd.
in Fiering 208). Morton was concerned with developing more accessible modes of inquiry, and he
helped to advance the transition from a deductive to an inductive frame of reference that was more
attentive to the inventive capacities of individual experiences, not just in the sciences but in moral and
political affairs as well. To help students make sense of the new learning, he reduced his ideas to
rhyming couplets in broadly accessible lectures that remained popular until superseded by Francis
Hutcheson's moral philosophy.
Like Hutcheson, Morton swept away the Scholastic jargon that enshrouded Aristotelian ethics
to revitalize its civic emphasis on purposeful action. He treated the Aristotelian conception of
"prudence" as a model of "Practical Understanding" concerned with assessing the practical means and
ethical ends of purposeful action. The students’ notes from Morton’s classes are not detailed enough to
assess how fully he developed this philosophy. He refers to generative concerns such as the laws of
nature and nations, and he commented on how prices are set by supply and demand in terms that
suggest he took a nascent interest in the movement of economics away from classical doctrines of
domestic economy toward the science of political economy that emerged from Adam Smith's lectures
on moral philosophy at Glasgow University in the middle of the century (Williams Commonplace
Book). The limited extant evidence suggests that Morton taught students to look to the ancients not
24
with scholastic veneration but for their practical relevance to contemporary political, economic, and
moral issues, which he apparently discussed in largely non-theological terms.
As long as moral philosophy was deduced to be more or less synonymous with natural
religion, it did not threaten the curricular primacy of theology, but broader challenges arose when
human nature began to be studied “experimentally” to reason inductively from individual experiences.
As a student at Harvard in the first decade of the eighteenth century, Samuel Johnson was advised not
to read Descartes, Boyle, Locke, and Newton "because the new philosophy” would “corrupt the pure
religion of the country" (Career 1:6). While the corrupting secularism of classical humanists had been
carefully compartmentalized within the Ramistic curriculum, Johnson’s sense of the “circle of
learning” was ruptured by modes of inquiry that challenged the primacy of received beliefs in the
creation of knowledge (Elementa viii). In contrast, the new learning treated the individual as a source
of knowledge, in part because differences in experience had to be accounted for in new ways as a
result of social diversification. The new learning did not really evolve into a new pedagogy until
students gained enough access to books to be able to survey a range of experiences. The individual
reader with access to varied accounts of experience provided a standpoint that unsettled how literate
people understood the logic of their experience. Ironically, the mid-century expansion of the periodical
press was fueled in part by the fervent orality of the Great Awakening. The impassioned oratory of
evangelists helped build an audience for periodicals because readers wanted to keep up with the news
of figures such as the leading evangelist of the time, George Whitefield, who was also known as
Whitfield because even the spelling of names had not yet been completely standardized by print.
The Great Awakening: "The word was sharper than a two-edged sword"
In addition to providing newsworthy controversies, the Great Awakening contributed to
growth of the press by invigorating the style of print with the idioms of the popular vernacular. In this
and other ways, the Great Awakening raised basic questions about how the literate represented the
public. The populist revivalism of the Great Awakening is best known through sensationalist sermons
such as Edwards' “Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God.” The impact of such powerful rhetoric is
recounted in Whitefield’s journal:
The word was sharper than a two-edged sword. The bitter cries and groans were enough to
pierce the hardest heart. Some of the people were as pale as death, others were wringing their
hands, others lying on the ground, others sinking into the arms of their friends, and most
lifting up their eyes to heaven and crying to God for mercy. (qtd. in Cheyney 19-20)
Whitefield and his supporters traveled throughout the colonies in the 1730s and 1740s preaching the
need to be reborn in the spirit and attacking "letter-learned" but unregenerate clergy (Tennent, Danger
474). Critics of the established clergy founded Princeton, Dartmouth, Rutgers, and Brown. To attract
students, emerging colleges often distanced themselves from sectarian divisions and deemphasized
theology by confining it to students’ private studies. Divisive religious debates helped to build a
receptive audience for the rhetoric of the American Revolution, which according to Howard Miller
was seen to be “the secular fulfillment” of the renewal of the covenant in the Great Awakening (xviii).
In these ways, published debates over religious differences expanded the sphere of public deliberations
by making print an important force in shaping popular opinion, while at the same time undermining
religious control of public education by moving sectarian differences toward the private sphere.
The Great Awakening made it difficult for clerics to maintain conformity within their
congregations. Itinerant preachers, some of whom were not formally educated, toured the colonies
preaching to hundreds and even thousands in tent revivals that condemned local clerics if they failed to
offer support. People were sometimes encouraged to leave established congregations and found their
own churches, which in some cases were led by lay preachers who were not college graduates. The
idea that an uneducated itinerant could be qualified to preach the Word if he, or even she, had
experienced personal regeneration undermined the educational authority of the literate, while the threat
of expulsion lost its force when factions absented themselves to form their own institutions. The
numbers of those growing up outside the church rose dramatically as the population increased some
six hundred percent between 1700 and 1760 (from 250,000 to 1,170,000). Even in New England, only
about one in seven were church members, and only about half that number in the middle colonies.
25
Such groups were persuasively addressed by George Whitefield, who became one of the most
famous orators of the eighteenth century. A marginally literate farmer painstakingly recorded in his
journal how he had traveled for miles along roads so packed with seekers that the dust looked like "fog
rising.” After hearing Whitefield preach in an open field on the damnation that awaited the unsaved,
the farmer experienced a "heart wound" that "lasted almost two years" (Sloan, Documentary History
70-1). Whitefield spoke for an experimental knowledge of Jesus Christ and concluded that the intense
reactions of his audiences demonstrated the power of such knowledge.17 His sermons became
legendary, not for their ideas but for their delivery. Even a skeptic such as Franklin found that he was
not immune to "the extraordinary Influence of his Oratory." Franklin was surprised to see people so
moved by being harangued as "half Beasts and half Devils," and then he found his own frugality
overcome as he emptied his pockets into the collection plate (Autobiography 87-8). Franklin circled
the audience, computed the area, and calculated that Whitefield could be heard by 25,000 people.
Many better-educated clerics were put off by the populist rhetoric of evangelicals. Their
responses offer insights into the dynamic relations of orality and literacy during the decade when
English was established as an object of formal study in higher education. Samuel Johnson observed
that revival meetings "looked like a very hell upon earth; some sighing, some groaning, some
screeching and wringing their hands, the minister all the while, like a fiend, tormenting them till they
would come to Christ." Johnson was so repulsed by how evangelists "broke through all order and rule"
that he joined those who retreated into the Anglican Church "as their only ark of safety" (Career 1:28).
Johnson felt that the "congregational form of church government" was too open to the populist fervor
created by the "extempore" style of evangelists. Johnson reacted by retreating into the "preconceived,
well-composed forms" of Anglican worship as a check on oratorical excess. Johnson believed that the
disturbing tendencies of rhetorical "invention" could only be constrained by having individuals recite
assigned texts, as students had for centuries in the classroom (Career 1:11-2). Other established clerics
also condemned the "extemporaneous" style of illiterate "enthusiasts" (Chauncy, "Letter" 9-12).
A direct challenge to the representative authority of literate clerics was raised by Gilbert
Tennent's The Dangers of an Unconverted Ministry. In an often repeated phrase, Tennent criticized
"letter-learned" "Pharisee-Teachers" as uninspired and thus uninspiring, (474). He encouraged
audiences to leave such preachers and called for new colleges to produce more eloquent ones. Tennent
was praised and attacked in newspapers and pamphlets across the colonies. Less educated itinerants
were quick to exploit the idea that "the common people claim as good a right to judge and act for
themselves in matters of religion as civil rulers or the learned clergy" (qtd. in Henretta, Evolution 136).
Established clerics defended their positions in works such as John Hancock's The Danger of an
Unqualified Ministry and Charles Chauncey's Enthusiasm Described and Caution’d Against (1742).
Chauncey advised readers to conclude that preachers were "enthusiasts" if they spoke in impassioned
style from personal experience rather than the Bible, or if they challenged public officials or let
women preach (492). Few terms had the condemnatory power of "enthusiasm" among educated
audiences because it meant that one was speaking not with learned authority but from "the delusions of
a vain imagination" (Chauncy, Enthusiasm 500).
For their part, evangelists were less concerned with preserving conventions than with reaching
out to the less educated, including slaves and Native Americans. Following in the Calvinist tradition of
literate devotion, evangelical New Lights such as Samuel Davies set up reading and corresponding
societies that could serve as alternatives for communities that lacked a preacher, or felt they had little
to learn from the one they had (see "Reading Revivals"; rptd. Sloan 222-26). These groups were
forerunners to the corresponding committees who would help to unify the colonies in the cause of
independence, and also to the correspondence societies that Dissenters helped working people set up
in Britain (see Miller, Formation). Unlike many New Lights, Davies did not found an academy, but he
treated his church as a school, seeking out books for those who could not afford them and writing
17
Whitefield's most famous imitator was Gilbert Tennent, who was known for roaring with divine
laughter at sufferings of the damned (Morgan, "Movement" 16). Whitefield noted that Tennent "learned
experimentally to dissect the heart of natural man." The missionary fervor of New Lights was an inspiration to
groups who had often been ignored by the clergy, including the first African American writer "of
consequence," Phillis Wheatley, a slave who gained an international readership for her poem "On the Death of
the Rev. Mr. George Whitefield" (1770) (see Norton Anthology of American Literature 554-5)
26
religious poetry in an evocative style aimed at the less literate. Such efforts broadened the base of print
literacy at the same time that published debates over individual rights and public authorities were
beginning to make the press an important factor in popular politics.
While they were not themselves college graduates, Davies and Tennent were instrumental in
founding Princeton and the other colleges that evolved out of the sixty-five Presbyterian academies
that were established in the last three quarters of the eighteenth century. Many were started by Scots or
Scots-Irish immigrants, and most had strong ties with reformers in the English Dissenting academies
and Scottish universities. The most influential of the Presbyterian academies was the "Log College"
where Gilbert Tennent had himself been educated by his father, William Tennent, a Scots-Irish
immigrant who had graduated from Edinburgh University in 1695. New Lights were far more active in
setting up such academies than their opponents, with the leading exception being the academy set up
by Francis Alison, who had emigrated from Scotland after graduating from Edinburgh in 1732.
According to a letter by a graduate eulogizing Alison in the Pennsylvania Journal on April 19, 1780,
Alison's academy emphasized English and had students write "themes," letters, and "abridgements of a
paper from the Spectators or Guardians (the best standards of our language)" (rptd. in Sloan,
Documentary 176). In 1738, the Old Lights attempted to exploit the fact that evangelists such as
Tennet and Davies lacked degrees by requiring them of all ministers. The New Lights responded by
setting up their own synod at New York and then founding their own college at Princeton in 1746.18
Traditionalists responded by tightening their control of established colleges and restricting
“private” teaching and preaching. When Whitefield described Harvard and Yale as centers of
"Darkness" in 1744, he was attacked by Harvard Professor of Divinity Edward Wigglesworth, one of
(rptd. Hofstadter and Smith 64). Wigglesworth charged Whitefield with seeking to discourage
"publick spirited Persons from becoming Benefactors" to colleges (rptd. Hoftstadter and Smith 72,
67). Under President Clap, the Yale college laws of 1745 specifically forbade attendance at "Public or
Private" services that were not "appointed by Public Authority or Approved by the President"
(Hofstadter and Smith 55). Under this proscription, two evangelical students were expelled for
attending "a private separate Meeting in a private House" to hear a "Lay-Exhorter"—not while at
college but while at home with their families (rptd. Hofstadter and Smith 77). President Clap
maintained that even a majority of a congregation had no "right" to separate from "the publick Place
appointed by the General Assembly and the Parish" (77, 79). Clap’s reactionary attempt to maintain
the public authority clerics was clearly a reaction both to the social divisions that are documented by
Lockridge’s study of Dedham, and to the resultant tendency of emerging colleges to treat sectarian
divisions as a private matter.
As with traditional edicts on the use of Latin in the classroom, Clap’s reactionary proscriptions
document the expansion of the sort of change that they were meant to contain. The boundaries of
private and public spheres were clearly shifting. These shifts are evident in Wigglesworth's response to
Whitefield's charge that faculty were failing "to examine the Hearts of their Pupils." Wigglesworth
rejected the idea that professors should examine individual’s private beliefs, which he treated as a
personal matter (rptd. in Hofstadter and Smith 69-70). Wigglesworth distanced his role as a teacher
from that of preachers. While preachers and teachers had publicly examined the personal feelings of
those seeking to join the church as members and preachers, Wigglesworth found it publicly expedient
to disavow such intrusive examinations of individual beliefs as an invasion of privacy. Protections of
private religious opinions were publicized in the laws of the colleges that became Dartmouth,
Princeton, Brown, Rutgers, and Columbia. While Dartmouth was associated with Congregationalists,
Princeton with Presbyterians, Rhode Island with Baptists, and Columbia with Anglicans, all were
careful when constituting boards and establishing curricula to distance themselves from sectarian
differences in order to identify their mission as serving the general public.
These positions provide practical political benchmarks for relating literacy and literacy studies
to changing conceptions of the public and public education. Related changes are also evident in the
18
Alison went on to become vice-provost of the College of Philadelphia, where he taught English and
moral philosophy courses based on the works of Francis Hutcheson, as will be discussed in the next chapter. In a
letter to President Stiles of Yale in December 12, 1767, Alison stated that when he immigrated, "there was not a
College, nor even a good grammar school, in four Provinces, Maryland, Pensylvania, Jersey & New York," and
all who "made any pretensions to learning were branded as letter learned Pharisees." (Letters 15 and 17).
27
forms of public discourse that were gaining popularity. Debates in the periodical press over the Great
Awakening gave rise to hybrid genres that combined the evangelical appeals of popular eloquence
with traditional features of academic discourse and emerging elements of print literacy. For example,
one of the many periodicals that emerged in the decade of the Great Awakening was the American
Magazine & Historical Chronicle, which began its first issue in 1743 with a "Dissertation on the State
of Religion in North America." This “dissertation” praised Whitefield's moving "Elocution" but then
concluded with an early attempt at a balanced journalistic stance: "weak enthusiastick hot-headed
Men, according to some, the Work of God and the Cause of Christ, according to others" (3-4). The first
issue of the magazine placed statements from various factions alongside accounts of the graduation
theses that had been delivered at a Harvard commencement (printed in English as well as Latin to
reach less literate readers). Popular debates and learned pronouncements were being mixed up in the
periodical press with tales of foreign travels, cures for diseases, and such "Poetical Essays" as a
"Riddle for Ladies" and "The Gentleman Lover." The periodical press made political debates, personal
refinement, and learned inquiry accessible to the reading public—a public no longer confined to a
local community or dependent on its traditional spokesmen for information.
In magazine commentaries on the populist rhetoric of the evangelicals, one can see how
conceptions of public and private were being mediated in new ways. For example, in the first
magazine in America, the American Magazine or a Monthly View of the Political state of the British
Colonies, a letter to the editor was published on the issue of whether private individuals have the right
to question public authorities:
What is the Publick, but the collective Body of private Men, as every private Man is a
Member of the Publick? And as the Whole ought to be concerned for the Preservation of every
private Individual, it is the Duty of every Individual to be concern'd for the Whole, in which
himself is included. (1741: 112)
While the citizen is still a gendered construct, all “Men” are assumed to have rights to speak in public,
and the "Publick" is assumed to be as accessible as the periodical press taken to be. The author’s
arguments are supported with long excerpts from an anonymous article from the London Journal and
an unnamed Commonwealthman commentator on the English Revolution. These authors are unnamed,
as is the author, for it is assumed that one’s standing in literate debates is determined by the virtues of
one’s argument and not by one’s standing in the community. Interestingly, the letter is cast in the form
of a response to a disputed question: "Whether private Persons have a Right to inquire into the Nature
of Government, and in the Conduct of Governors?" Imitating the genre of a forensic debate, the author
directly addresses his opponents as if they were facing each other in an academic forum (109). In the
print version of this traditional oral form, correspondents who served as representative citizens model
the virtues of reasoned debate for those with less access to higher education.
The adoption of the genre of an academic disputation is notable because the genre was about
to be transformed by the epistemological and institutional changes that can be identified with the rise
of the periodical press. As I will discuss in the next section, the transition from syllogistic to forensic
disputations turned on an expanding engagement in the popular debates that supported the introduction
of formal English studies. The Great Awakening challenged the authority of clerics by suggesting that
anyone, even an uneducated outsider, was qualified to speak if he, or even she, had personally
experienced regeneration. Authoritarian clerics such as Clap fought a rearguard action to maintain the
public authority of educated clerics by forming local associations against itinerant evangelicals’
encroachments—the "County Watchdogs" as they were known in Clap's case (see Tucker). However,
the social contract between clerics and congregations was becoming understood in less sacred and
more secular terms. As communities became more fluid and diversified, they came to view their
ministers as contractual employees and began to fire them much more frequently (see Henretta 210).
With the reinterpretation of the social contract in economic terms, even the leading descendant of the
great New England divines, Jonathan Edwards, could be dismissed by his congregation for trying to
reintroduce the custom of having people bare their souls in public to become members. By the middle
of the eighteenth century, conflicts over such traditional assumptions had been fueled by social
diversification in ways that shattered the "Christian corporatism" that had characterized such
communities as Dedham (Lockridge 172). According to Bailyn, increased mobility and intensifying
economic pressures converged to weaken the patriarchal structure of the extended family and
28
strengthen the role of education as a means to maintain shared values (Education 24-5). These trends
shaped the field of cultural production in which English was constituted as an object of formal study.
The Introduction of Formal English Studies
While the Great Awakening helped expand access to print literacy by building an audience for
the periodical press, the greatest impact of the evangelical New Lights, according to Harvey Graff,
was “to renew the power of speech," "freeing it from conventions and returning public speaking to
everyday rhetoric" (Legacies 253). The deductive form and didactic purposes of New England pulpit
oratory had been consistent with the emphasis on syllogistic reasoning in the curriculum, but from the
1740s on, graduates faced increasingly diverse audiences. After serving as the model for learned
discourse for centuries, syllogistic disputations began to be replaced by forensic debates in the middle
of the eighteenth century. Syllogistic disputations disappeared from most college curricula and
commencement exercises before the last decades of the century. While syllogistic reasoning had
reinforced the traditional emphasis on Latin and logic, forensic debates provided students with
opportunities to speak to the popular controversies of the time.
The Harvard Laws of 1723 required students to dispute twice weekly in their first three years
and once weekly in their final year. As with other requirements, these statutes may not be accurate
records of what actually went on, for contemporary accounts note that students were not composing
disputations. In the 1720s President Wadsworth frequently complained in his diary that he had to fine
students for failing to conduct disputations, and in 1732 he noted that only two disputations had been
held all year. According to Potter, this resistance prompted colleges to deemphasize syllogistic
disputations (Debating 25). At midcentury several colleges began to reduce requirements of syllogistic
disputations and introduce forensic debates in both classroom and graduation exercises. Forensics
became a common requirement in most college laws, while syllogistic disputations disappeared from
the college laws at King's in 1763, from Princeton in 1764, from William and Mary in 1782, and from
Rhode Island in 1783. By the last quarter of the century, syllogistic disputations had become little
more than perfunctory exercises at most commencements. They disappeared altogether from such
programs at King's in 1770, at Princeton in 1774, at Philadelphia in 1775, at Yale in 1788, at Harvard
in 1792, and at Dartmouth in 1798 (Potter, Debating 27-29).
While syllogistic disputations treated received beliefs as categorical assumptions, forensic
debates provided students with opportunities to speak in less academic registers that included ethical
and pathetic as well as logical appeals. Forensic speeches were typically two to three pages and almost
always in English, and they were not confined to Scholastic commonplaces or even academic themes.
While syllogistic disputations had been seen as the epitome of learned discourse, forensic disputations
were identified with popular argumentation, as in the Yale Laws of 1766, which praised forensics for
being "better adapted to the common Use and Practice of Mankind, in the Conduct of Publick Affairs"
(Clap, Annals 82). Isaac Watts was widely read to teach forensics, which he modeled on the "Sorts of
Disputations in publick Assemblies or Courts of Justice, . . . especially in civil matters" (Improvement
173). Watts was concerned with popular argumentation because he wanted to teach students to speak
against the restrictions imposed on Dissenters such as himself (Miller, Formation). This concern for
popular politics was shared by many colonial students in the decades between the Great Awakening
and the Revolution, as documented by the orations they composed to celebrate their graduation into
public life. The issue of American independence was debated at the first commencement at Rhode
Island in 1769, and by the time war broke out, public commencements were popularizing a litany of
republican themes drawn from civic humanist and natural rights traditions, including the social
contract, natural rights, civic duties, and the corruption of public virtue by private luxuries. 19
The transition from syllogistic disputations to more broadly applicable forms of debate infused
rhetoric with new significance. The first commencement thesis on rhetoric at Harvard to stress public
debate was in 1718, and from 1720 theses on rhetoric began to reclaim the attention to invention and
arrangement that had been lost under Ramus (Ota 117). From the second quarter of the century, civic
humanist works such as Cicero's De Oratore and Quintilian's Institutes began to be more widely cited
19
Commencement theses have been examined in detail by Thomas, Guthrie, Peaden, and Perrin.
Extensive lists of theses are included in Potter's Debating in the Colonial Chartered Colleges.
29
in accounts of studies and library loan records. The classical emphasis on public oratory also gained
currency with the popularity of neo-Ciceronian works such as Lamy's The Art of Speaking and
especially John Ward's System of Oratory.20 In a Ciceronian fashion, Ward and Lamy examined all
five arts of rhetoric and subordinated style to purpose as the controlling element in composition.
Americans were also influenced by the sources that established English composition, rhetoric, and
literature in Scottish and Dissenting curricula. Henry Home's Elements of Criticism was shipped to
Harvard when it was published in 1762, and at Princeton in 1768 John Witherspoon instituted an
approach to rhetoric and belles lettres that was less belletristic and more civic than Blair's (see my
“Blair, Witherspoon, and the Rhetoric of Civic Humanism”).
As syllogistic disputations were being replaced by forensic debates, logic and ancient
languages were being reduced to introductory subjects in the first year, with very few texts in Latin
adopted in other areas of the curriculum after the middle of the century, as detailed in Dexter's
Documentary History of Yale. Syllogistic reasoning had been a mainstay of the curriculum when logic
was studied throughout the curriculum, but President Stiles of Yale reported that when he visited
Harvard, logic was only being taught for less than an hour every other week in the final term of the
first year (Ota 73). The era when logic "triumphed over the arts" had ended according to Clarke's
Letters to a Student in the University of Cambridge, and "syllogisms seem now to be passing into
oblivion” (80, 85). Syllogistic disputations had provided students with opportunities to display a
formulaic mastery of Latin, but studies of classical languages were also receding. Traditional
proscriptions against using English were not kept on the books after 1734 even at Harvard, and
emerging colleges generally adopted English as the language of instruction. The broad-based decline
of classical languages is evident in Teaford's examination of the collapse of the grammar school
tradition in Massachusetts. Beginning in 1647 Massachusetts had required all towns of over one
hundred families to fund a grammar school, and up to 1718 fines had been raised to keep them higher
than the costs of a school. After the middle of century, the government ignored the rising numbers of
towns that failed to fund grammar schools, and Teaford's detailed research shows that such failures
were not due to poverty, isolation, or a lack of teachers but to a change in attitudes to classical
education (297-8). Such changes led to public calls to repeal the law because "so many Latin grammar
schools" prevented students from attaining "such a degree of English learning as is necessary to retain
the freedom of the state" (qtd. in Teaford 35). Teaford contrasts the declining support for classical
languages with the rising numbers of "writing schools," which taught many of the same subjects to the
same aged students, but with a practical emphasis on learning to write (7-14).
Inside the academy, interest in English studies increased along with the trends that I have
noted: a transition from syllogistic to forensic disputations, a resurgence of a civic perspective on
rhetoric, the intensifying political debates of the time, and the declining emphasis on Latin and logic.
To improve their writing and speaking skills, students began forming literary clubs, with one of the
first being the "Telltale" or "Spy Club" established at Harvard in 1721. Like many of the societies that
were being founded throughout the British provinces, the Telltale was modeled on the Spectator Club.
The essays of the Spectator were imitated, and the students’ essays were bound together and circulated
as "Criticisms on the Conversation and Behaviour of Scholars to promote right Reasoning & good
Manners." Student essays addressed the virtues of "well regulated" conversation and polite refinement
and criticized classroom disputations as "Packs of Profound Nonsense" ("Telltale"; see Lane). Student
interest in the belletristic essays of the Spectator and related works on taste such as The Gentleman
Instructed is evident in commonplace books such as those of Jonathan Belcher from 1727 and John
Winthrop's from 1728. Literary societies provided students with opportunities to discuss such interests
and receive criticisms from their peers on their compositions at the same time that forensic
disputations and orations were increasing the attention to English in the classroom. As I will discuss in
the next two chapters, student literary societies were instrumental in shaping the first century of the
development of college English studies.
20
Popular in library companies as well as college libraries, Ward's neoclassical Lectures were penned
into the Yale Library Catalogue of 1755, included in Harvard's catalogue of 1765, taught at other colleges such
as Brown, and often included in the catalogues of library companies. According to Guthrie, the influence of
Ward's survey of classical rhetoric was "almost as complete in its time as the later domination by Whately,
Campbell and Blair" (55-56).
30
Because colonial colleges tended to be governed by lay administrators and depended on the
support of their local communities, popular attitudes to literacy had a greater influence than in richlyendowed universities such as Oxford and Cambridge. This responsiveness to social change helps
explain why formal instruction in English was introduced in the British cultural provinces a century
earlier than at the centers of English education. Such studies were being introduced at the same time
that professorships dedicated to teaching English composition and rhetoric were being founded in
Irish, Scottish and English Dissenting institutions of higher education. In 1754 a Harvard Board of
Overseers committee was set up to "project some method to promote oratory.” The following year the
committee recommended to the Corporation that the President lecture on oratory to all students and
that the program of declamations at the Overseers' semiannual visitations be replaced with dialogues in
English and Latin and disputations "in the forensic manner, without being confined to syllogisms”
(qtd. Josiah Quincy 2: 124, 127) And the year after that, the Overseers praised the English exercises
they had observed on their visitation and recommended that they be continued to encourage
"Eloquence and oratorical attainment." In 1766 the Overseers recommended that a special tutor be
established to teach all students "Elocution, Composition in English, Rhetoric, and other parts of the
Belles Lettres" (Quincy 2:135)21
A public donor gave funds for a professorship in rhetoric in 1771, but Harvard did not actually
establish the professorship until thirty-three years later when a descendant of the donor tried to sue to
recover the funds. The Boylston Professor of Rhetoric and Oratory was founded in 1804 and first
staffed by Senator John Quincy Adams in 1806. However, the Corporation made the teaching of
English part of the responsibilities of the Professor of Oriental Languages in 1786. To make up for the
declining interest in Syriac, Chaldiaic, Samaritan, and Hebrew, the professor was required to teach a
freshmen English grammar course and a sophomore composition course with weekly assignments, and
also to respond to the biweekly compositions submitted by upper-class students. This reform would
not be the last time that composition would be assigned to professors whose classes had failed to
attract students with more contemporary interests.
While at Harvard public representatives took the initiative, at Yale it was the students
themselves who pushed for the teaching of English. President Clap introduced weekly forensic
disputations in the 1750s, but he was forced to resign in 1766 after the students left the college in mass
to protest his authoritarianism. Instruction in English apparently began on an informal basis the very
next year (Brooks Kelley 78-80). A dozen students took it upon themselves to buy their tutor a copy of
Ward's Lectures on Oratory and get him to preside over weekly meetings in which they critiqued each
others’ compositions (Ota 91). Students also began to complain more strongly about the stifling
emphasis on dead languages and Scholastic metaphysics. The most notable critic was John Trumbull,
who graduated in 1767, became a tutor, and anonymously published The Progress of Dulness
ridiculing colleges for maintaining an outmoded curriculum that excluded contemporary life and
letters (see Kingsley 1:98). In 1776 a group of seniors went to the Corporation to request permission to
have one of the tutors, Timothy Dwight, teach them a course in "Rhetorick, History, and the Belles
Lettres," which the corporation agreed to as long as students got a note from their parents (see Clark).
A recent Yale historian has haughtily responded to this historic transition by noting that the curriculum
had "contained what the Western world had long felt an educated man should know. And the criticism
tended to be of the strain that has produced cries for more 'practical' or 'relevant' college courses
throughout American history" (Kelley 82-3). This stance would come to distinguish the neoclassical
perspective of elite institutions such as Yale and Harvard from the more broadly based approach to
literacy studies that would be adopted by more accessible institutions of public education.
Then as now, more broadly based colleges could not afford to dismiss changing perceptions of
what "an educated man should know” because they did not have alumni and other donors among the
traditional elite and had to attract broader classes of students to survive. As a result, several newly
established colleges made the transition from syllogistic to forensic disputations before Harvard or
Yale. Also, English was formally taught in several of these colleges before Yale or Harvard. The first
professorship of English in America was founded at the establishment of the College of Philadelphia
21
Wadsworth's Commonplace Book from his junior year documents the texts on rhetoric and belles
lettres that were being studied at Harvard in 1766-7. Wadsworth took notes on the works of David Fordyce,
Charles Rollin, Bernard Lamy, John Ward, Philip Doddridge, John Wilkins, and James Addison.
31
in 1755. As I will discuss in the next chapter, much of the time of this professorship was dedicated to
teaching basic writing and reading in the English school and female academy that were associated with
the College. Overworked and underpaid, like many writing teachers today, none of the professors of
English at Philadelphia published their lectures, and few records of their classes remain. The second
professorship to include the teaching of English was founded at King's College when it was
reorganized as Columbia College in 1784, but before that, the first president of King's, Samuel
Johnson, had taught a freshman rhetoric course in English. Johnson established English as the
language of instruction and required regular forensic disputations and English compositions. The first
college text on the teaching of English came out of the course in "Composition and Criticism" that
John Witherspoon taught at Princeton, where he served as President after immigrating in 1768. These
developments will be examined in more detail when I look beyond the first New England colleges in
the next chapter.
Conclusion: From Public Seminaries to Private Corporations
From their first incorporation with boards that included lay representatives, colonial colleges
were understood to be public seminaries charged with perpetuating "Learning and Godlinesse" (First
Fruits 6). Into the eighteenth century, the learned preached the Word in towns where they were often
the only college graduates. They were prepared for such duties by a curriculum that was as closed as
the communities they would lead. Students demonstrated their mastery of ancient languages and
deductive reasoning in syllogistic disputations that served as a model for the didactic sermons that
they would preach to the converted. While New England was more literate than England, most
households included but a couple of sacred texts used for private devotion. Books generally held
authority in daily life only in the hands of a clergyman, and that authority was reinforced by his
position in the community and his contacts beyond it. In such communities, as in the classroom,
individuals learned not from books but from people, with what was learned inseparable from who it
was learned from. Knowledge was transmitted through a hierarchical diffusion pattern much as it was
in colleges through oral recitations and scribal compendia. In this scribal information economy,
learning was a process of reasoning deductively from established beliefs to individual obligations, and
the learned controlled a public sphere that was centered in the services over which they presided, with
membership decided by individuals’ ability to account for their personal experiences in ways that fit
received assumptions about how it felt to be one of the elect.
As colonial society expanded and diversified in the late seventeenth century, religious
uniformity could not be maintained, even with compromises that expanded church membership to
those who would not review their individual religious experiences in public. In the 1730s and 40s, the
expanding numbers of the unchurched prompted a Great Awakening of populist evangelism. Itinerant
preachers challenged the public authority of the educated by propagating doctrines of individual rights
and establishing institutions that gave individuals choices in how they worshipped and how they
learned. Evangelists helped expand access to literacy by establishing schools and colleges, fostering
debates that expanded the reading public, and encouraging individuals to see themselves as having the
authority to interpret sacred texts. The number of colleges tripled within a quarter century, and new
colleges had to promote a nonsectarian sense of their public mission to attract funds and students.
Intense public criticism arose when Anglicans established a college in New York that would be open
to all, but headed by an Anglican. The leading critic, William Livingston, argued in newspaper articles
and pamphlets that "a public academy is, or ought to be a mere civil institution, and cannot with any
tolerable propriety be monopolized by any religious sect" (Independent Reflector March 29, 1753;
rptd. in Hofstadter and Smith 101). These debates promoted the doctrines of freedom of opinion and
expression that had been espoused during the Great Awakening, leaving Anglican presidents such as
Johnson to defend their position by arguing that divisive religious doctrines would be treated as
private matters within colleges (Hofstadter and Smith 110).
In response to shifts in the boundaries between private and public life, President Clap
attempted to position Yale as a private religious corporation that should be kept free of state
governance. Students responded to his authoritarian encroachments on their individual rights by
appealing to the government to intervene. Clap defended his authority by publishing The Religious
Constitution of Colleges (1754) and later pamphlets that rewrote the history of Yale to date its
32
founding from a donation of books by ten clergy. He changed the date of that donation from his earlier
manuscript histories so that it preceded the government's chartering of the college in 1701 (Tucker
Puritan 35-6). Drawing on the protections for individual and property rights in English Common Law,
Clap argued that while anyone had a right to establish a college, students who chose to come to an
established college were obliged to accept its doctrines. As the "Property" of its founders, Yale was set
out as a private domain free from public authority (rptd. Hofstadter and Smith 115). Clap advanced the
lines of argument that would be followed to overturn the appropriation of the colleges by Republican
legislatures after the Revolution.22 As Clap had set out, elite educational institutions followed religion
in moving into the private domain in reaction to the increasing heterogeneity of the public. While Clap
held that the religious heterodoxy of the colony made the college an authority unto itself (115), his
critics responded that there was "no sense, in calling the College a Society of Ministers" because it had
been vested with "civil" and not "ministerial" authority (rptd. Hofstadter and Smith 127-8).
The pamphlet war that Clap participated in over whether Yale was a private corporation or a
public institution first set out the position that elite colleges would come to assume in the American
public sphere. This position was established as a point of law with the famous Dartmouth Supreme
Court case in 1819, which overturned the imposition of state control by the Republican governor and
legislature of New Hampshire as an usurpation of "corporate privileges" (Rptd. Crane 67). The
judgment overruled Republican efforts to control what the governor had characterized as "literary
establishments." The Supreme Court looked instead to the logic of a market economy to make sense of
the increasing diversification of the public sphere. In a marked departure from established conceptions
of colleges as public seminaries, elite institutions were able to secure a privileged position as private
enterprises that should be kept free of state control (rptd. Crane 65). Invoking free market economics
to demarcate private corporations dedicated to "acquisitions to literature," Chief Justice Marshall's
decision positioned the state in a regulative relationship to the higher education market that is
distinctly American, quite different as it is from the integrated state educational systems in most other
countries (rptd. Crane 74).23 The differing positions and purposes of private and public colleges have
generally been ignored by disciplinary specialists, but that distinction would come to structure literacy
studies as a field of cultural production within higher education. As I will explore in successive
chapters, studies of literature and the teaching of composition serve distinct purposes in differing
classes of institutions, and the elaboration of those distinctions is integral to the expansion and
stratification of the literate public. Attending to such structural developments is vital to understanding
how literacy studies have been and are being shaped by broader changes in literacy and the literate,
including access to higher education, especially those colleges traditionally reserved for the upper
classes.
22
The Assembly responded to Clap by cutting off Yale's annual grant in 1755. Clap was able to keep the
Assembly from asserting control by threatening to appeal to London, raising anxieties that the government might
look into the ambiguities in the charter of the colony as well as that of the college. Clap was finally forced to
resign in 1766 after students destroyed the college and drove off the tutors before walking out. The Assembly
then intervened to reestablish public control (see Herbst, Crisis 114-9).
23
This incorporation of higher education into the market economy in terms of "corporate privileges" was
consistent with emerging trends in copyright and property law (Crane 67). This case also helped establish the
internal political economy of American universities by investing control in boards of lay administrators rather
than in the faculty, as was the tradition in many European educational systems (see Rudolph 210-11).
33
CHAPTER TWO
REPUBLICAN RHETORIC
AMERICA remain'd, during a long Period, in the thickest Darkness of Ignorance and
Barbarism, till Christianity, at the Introduction of the Europeans, enlightened her Hemisphere.
. . . At length, several Gentlemen residing in and near the Province of New Jersey , . . . having
observ'd the vast Increase of those Colonies, with the Rudeness, and Ignorance of their
Inhabitants, for want of the necessary means of Improvement, first projected the Scheme of a
Collegiate Education in that Province.
(Tennent and Davies, A General Account of . . . the College . . . of New Jersey (1754) 92)
Among the Foreigners, who were as numerous as the English, many Distinctions were
forming upon their different Customs, Languages and Extractions, which, by creating separate
Interests, might in the Issue prove fatal to the Government. They wisely judg'd, therefore, that
Nothing cou'd so much contribute to make such a Mixture of People coalesce and unite in one
common Interest, as the common Education of all the Youth at the same public Schools under
the Eye of the civil Authority. (William Smith, The College of Mirania (1753) 10)
Thus instructed, youth will come out of this school fitted for learning any business, calling, or
profession, except such wherein languages are required; and though unacquainted with any
ancient or foreign tongue, they will be masters of their own, which is of more immediate and
general use, and withal will have attained many other valuable accomplishments. . . [that] may
qualify them to pass through and execute the several offices of civil life with advantage and
reputation to themselves and country. (Franklin, Sketch of an English School (1779) 7:252)
These passages set out the purposes that would shape the teaching of professors of English in
the colleges that were founded at Princeton by Tennent and Davies and at Philadelphia by Smith and
Franklin. As New Light Presbyterians, Tennent and Davies assumed that a college would advance
“enlightened” religion. As an unplaced minister and uneducated printer, Smith and Franklin justified
education in more secular terms. Even though Smith had himself recently arrived from Scotland, he
appealed to anxieties about "Foreigners" by arguing that education would instill a common culture.
Smith published his vision of the "College of Mirania" in an unsuccessful effort to secure a job in the
new college in New York, but Franklin was so impressed that he persuaded Smith to become the first
Provost of the the College of Philadelphia at its founding in 1755. The College of Philadelphia
established, according to Rudolph, "the first systematic course in America not deriving from the
medieval tradition nor intended to serve a religious purpose" (32).24 Franklin's contribution to these
reforms is especially notable because he was a leading example of the sort of enterprising individual
who capitalized on the potentials of the periodical press. Printers such as Franklin were coming to
rival ministers as arbiters of public opinion according to Bailyn (Education 93). As discussed in the
last chapter, the expansion of print shaped the origins of college English studies, and from their origins
they have been shaped by broader efforts to instill traditional values in the rising generation to
assimilate broader classes of students and prepare the most enterprising to join those of most worth.
The first professorship dedicated to the teaching of English was established at the College of
Philadelphia in 1755, and the first textbook on rhetoric and belles lettres by an American professor
was published from the course that John Witherspoon began teaching in 1768 at the College of New
Jersey at Princeton. To attract students and contributors, such colleges also introduced courses in
experimental science, commerce, government, and studies such as surveying that were useful to
students not interested in becoming clergymen. The new colleges at Philadelphia and New York set
out to appeal to what Longaker has characterized as the “emergent and established bourgeoisie,” while
the college at Princeton was oriented to the “commercial interests” of middle-class farmers (139, 178).
24
The College of Philadelphia was built upon the curricular reforms at Aberdeen. Franklin's Proposals
drew on works by two Aberdeen moral philosophers, George Turnbull's Observations upon Liberal Education
and David Fordyce's Dialogues Concerning Education. The curriculum that William Smith implemented was
modeled on his own studies at Aberdeen under Alexander Gerard (see Miller Formation).
34
These class interests were intertwined with religious affiliations. While the College of New Jersey had
ties with New Light Presbyterians, it received no regular church or state funding. While King's
College was built on land granted by the Anglican Church, Anglicans were a minority in New York,
and the college had to distance itself from religious divisions to position itself as a public institution.
Like those at New York and Princeton, the college at Philadelphia mediated the religious diversity of
the middle colonies by treating sectarian doctrines as a private matter best left to students and their
parents. Of the three colleges, the College, Academy, and Charitable School of Philadelphia was the
most secular, and the most broadly based. It included charity schools for boys and girls, a “mechanics”
academy, and in 1787 a Young Ladies Academy opened to offer the first secondary English courses
for women.
The colleges that were founded in the middle of the eighteenth century were responsive to the
rising numbers of students who were not interested in following the career path of previous college
graduates. Only forty-one percent of the graduates of Yale continued to enter the clergy from 1745 to
1771, and Yale was a staunch defender of orthodoxy(Kathryn Moore 45). According to President Ezra
Stiles, it was "the only American College in the Hands of Ecclesiastes" (Literary Diary; rptd.
Hofstadter and Smith 166). At the College of Philadelphia, even before the Revolution fewer
graduates joined the ministry than the law (Walsh 247). Emerging colleges educated different sorts of
students than Harvard or Yale. Ninety percent of King's College students were first generation college
students (Humphrey 225-26, 191). Fewer than ten percent of the graduates of King's became ministers
before the Revolution, with twice that going into law, and four times as many entering trade and
manufacturing. Almost half of Princeton students were entering the clergy at mid century, but from the
time Witherspoon became president in 1768 until his death in 1794, only a quarter did so (MacLachlan
xxi-ii; Maclean 357, 402-3; Collins 2:222).25 As Brown discusses in Knowledge is Power, clergymen
were losing their “virtual monopoly on public address” as other voices came to be “respected as
authoritative" (102). Lawyers tended to adopt a popular oratorical style that echoed with neoclassical
resonances of Cicero, while resounding with the "evangelical style that George Whitefield had
popularized throughout the colonies during their youth" (Brown 101). Composition courses and the
transition from syllogistic to forensic disputations helped lawyers form such a style, and according to
one lawyer of the time, courses in moral philosophy provided an "excellent foundation to begin the
study of law upon" (qtd. in Humphrey 167).
Courses in rhetoric and moral philosophy played pivotal roles in the curriculum in each of the
colleges at Philadelphia, New York, and Princeton. Moral philosophy courses enabled emerging
colleges to rise above sectarian divisions and focus on "forming a Succession of sober, virtuous,
industrious Citizens and checking the Course of growing Luxury" (Smith, Mirania 9). The civic
virtues of sobriety and industry were imbedded in a republican ideology that drew upon Scottish moral
philosophers such as Francis Hutcheson and David Fordyce. Such sources had a formative impact on
the generation of Jefferson, Madison, and Hamilton, each of whom took courses in rhetoric and moral
philosophy that were taught from Scottish texts by Scottish college graduates. These sources shaped
the Declaration of Independence and the US Constitution, as has been discussed in Garry Wills’
Inventing America and Explaining America. These efforts to articulate and institute a unified
American identity were but the most noted examples of the representative forms of self-governance
that were established in the oratorical literature of this period. The next chapter will examine
antebellum efforts to create a national literature and educational system, while this chapter focuses on
how the periodical press expanded the reading public into a national audience for deliberations on selfimprovement and self-governance. Readers who had limited access to education were introduced to
literate usage and taste by the grammars, rhetorics, elocutionary manuals, and literary anthologies that
appeared in increasing numbers at the end of the eighteenth century. Such texts provided aspiring
readers with models of polite self-restraint that helped to strengthen the representative institutions of
the new republic.
25
The decline of religious literature is also evident in publication rates. According to the subject
categories in Evans's bibliography, theological works accounted for 34.63% of all American publications
between 1730 and 1750, as compared to 11.45% on political science and law. Theological works accounted for
29.37% of publications between 1765 to 1773, and then declined by two-thirds to only 9.89% between 1774 and
1778 (see Tanselle 327-9).
35
In this chapter, we will look past New England to the half dozen colleges that were founded in
the middle colonies in the latter half of the eighteenth century. As discussed in the last chapter, Latin
ceased to be the means of instruction in the first half of the eighteenth century as literacy studies
shifted from a deductive framework to develop a more expansive engagement with changes in literacy
and the literate. Literature shifted from a religious to an oratorical register as magazines and
newspapers began to break up the scribal information economy and involve readers of more varied
backgrounds in debates over political self-governance. The curricular trends that gave rise to the first
professorships dedicated to teaching English are examined in the first section of the chapter, while the
second relates what when on in those courses to the collaborative learning opportunities that students
created in their own literary and debating societies. These literary societies were but one example of
how the diversification of civil society reshaped the field of cultural production within which the first
professors of English were established. The political standpoint of these courses was shaped by the
closely related courses in moral philosophy. The third and fourth sections follow through on the lines
of analysis I introduced in the last chapter to examine the surveys of ethics, politics, and economics
that shaped the oratorical literature of the Revolutionary Period. This literature had a broad appeal to
students not intended on joining the clergy, especially the rising numbers who would go into the law,
for it drew upon the close relations of natural and moral philosophy to found political rights and duties
upon natural laws and identify the social aspirations with the natural tendency towards improvement.
The stance of
The First Professorships of English
While early colonial education was shaped by efforts to preserve traditional values in a
frontier environment, those efforts expanded to meet the need to assimilate the rising numbers of nonEnglish immigrants. That educational challenge was compounded by the fact that the American
colonies more than doubled every twenty-five years through the eighteenth century. As a result of the
rising immigration, over half of the population south of New England was not of English descent by
the Revolution.26 The largest white immigrant group was the Scots-Irish, who had a hyphenated
identity because they had migrated not once but twice. Scots and Scots-Irish immigrants tended to be
poor, but between sixty-five and seventy-five percent were literate according to Lockridge (82). Scots
had strong cultural ties with their former proprietary colony in New Jersey, and even stronger
economic ties to Maryland and Virginia through the tobacco trade with Glasgow. In the middle
colonies the public was represented as "generally of the middling sort." According to the Pennsylvania
Journal of 1756, Pennsylvania was comprised mostly of "industrious farmers, artificers or men in
trade; they enjoy and are fond of freedom, and the meanest among them thinks he has a right to civility
from the greatest" (qtd. in Hofstadter American 131). According to Henretta, "a political system based
on compromise and accommodation gradually (and grudgingly) emerged in this area during the course
of the eighteenth century, giving institutional legitimacy and an encompassing constitutional form to
its cultural diversity" (Evolution 115).
Educational institutions were shaped by these accommodations. Colleges were looked to as a
means to establish the legitimacy of this “rational liberty.” In 1763 funds were raised for the new
colleges at Philadelphia and New York by arguing that "so mixed a multitude" would be a problem if
"left destitute of the necessary means of instruction, differing in language and manners[,]
unenlightened by religion, uncemented by a common education, strangers to the humane arts, and to
the just use of rational liberty" (qtd. in Herbst, Crisis 63). This “common education” would be
provided by colleges that promised that “public teaching” would exclude "sectarian differences of
opinion" in order to leave students to study religion "in a personal" way (rptd. Hofstadter and Smith
136). In this way, emerging colleges set themselves up as public bastions of "liberty and free enquiry"
that respected students' rights to "private judgment" (Blair, Account of the College; rptd. Hofstadter
26
Henretta estimates the population at 250,000 in 1700, 570,000 in 1725, 1,170,000 in 1750, 2,500,000
in 1775, and 5,300,000 in 1800 (Evolution 11). Hofstadter details how the middle and southern colonies became
diversified with the immigration of Germans, Dutch, Scots, Scots-Irish, and African slaves. The last was the
largest group and comprised over twenty percent of the population by 1770. Smith and Franklin were especially
anxious to assimilate Germans because 100,000 had immigrated by the Revolution, making them one third of the
population of Pennsylvania (America 66-7, 17-30).
36
and Smith 28). On these and other points, the colleges that were founded in the middle colonies were
shaped by the social diversity the region. Franklin and Smith both stressed that colleges would help
assimilate the "vast numbers of Foreigners [who ] are yearly imported among us, totally ignorant of
our Laws, Customs and Language." Franklin proposed an academy to prepare the better sort to lead,
and the "poorer Sort" to teach (rptd. in Montgomery 120). Religious differences in Philadelphia had
already prompted the creation of a system of free elementary schools. The College of Philadelphia
would also be steadfastly nondenominational, with students left to attend whatever churches their
families chose (Minutes 1:134).
The College of Philadelphia was created by a group of merchants, doctors, and lawyers led by
Franklin. Franklin wanted to establish an English school, but he found that the "learned languages"
had to be included to get funds from "persons of wealth and learning" (Observations, Works 10:87).
When instruction began in 1751, Franklin promoted his utilitarian model of English studies by
publishing his Idea of an English School. The structure of the school shows that he had been forced to
compromise on his model of “English education” by the trustees, at least nine of whom were educated
in English universities (Turner 108). The English teacher was to teach twice the students for half the
pay of the Latin teacher, who would head the whole school (Minutes of the Trustees of the College
1:4-5). Both wings of the school were to stress English and include studies such as history, geography,
rhetoric, and science, but the Latin school became the preparatory division of the College upon its
chartering in 1755. The subordinant status of the English school is important because its head was
"Professor of English Tongue and Oratory" and has been recognized as "our first college professor of
English" (Parker 7).
Franklin’s model of an "English education" gave unprecedented emphasis to oratorical
literature and composition as part of a broad program of study in "liberal Arts and Science," including
modern languages, history, and "Natural and Mechanick Philosophy" (Minutes 1:1). According to
Franklin's Proposals, students would learn "the clear and the concise" style by "Writing Letters to
each other, making Abstracts of what they read; or writing Stories lately read, in their own
Expressions. All to be revised and corrected by the Tutor, who should give his Reasons, explain the
Tone and Import of Words, & C." Franklin redefined the "classicks" of the literate culture to include
political and literary essayists--"Tillotson, Addison, Pope, Algernon, Sidney, Cato's Letters” (497). The
only subject given comparable emphasis to this oratorical literature was history, which would be
taught to demonstrate "the wonderful Effects of ORATORY." History courses were to teach how “the
Pen and the Press" had made the impact of "Modern Political Oratory" "more extensive" and "more
lasting" (498). In addition to tracing out the progress of literacy, historical studies would also examine
the "Rise of Manufactures, Progress of Trade," and the development of "Commerce," while natural
history would document the practical values of trade and agriculture (500). This pragmatic educational
philosophy became a strong strain in American education and continued through Horace Mann’s
efforts to establish a public school system, and through those efforts to the pragmatism of John
Dewey, as I will discuss in later chapters. Franklin's synthesis of the mechanical and liberal arts was a
product of his own career as a self-educated printer who gained note by writing practical selfinstruction works for the public. For generations of educators, and the self-educated, Franklin came to
personify “the republican man of letters, the citizen of print" (Warner 77).
Franklin thought he had found someone to implement his visions of the “classicks” of English
literature when he persuaded Smith to come teach at Philadelphia in 1754, but Franklin came to regret
his choice as soon as the College was chartered. Smith and Franklin adopted opposing political
stances, with Smith siding with the Penn family proprietors and Franklin a leading figure in the elected
Assembly, which often identified itself as "the friends of the people" (qtd. in Griffin xii). Governor
John Penn served as President of the Trustees of the College, and the Penns rewarded Smith and the
college for supporting them. When Smith criticized the Assembly in his American Magazine, he was
for a short time sent to prison, where his students dutifully continued to attend his lectures (Minutes of
the Trustees of the College 1:91). Franklin several times took to print to attack Smith and other
"Latinists" among the Trustees for failing to implement his vision of a modern program of study that
would provide a practical alternative to the classical curriculum (Writings 10:101). The conflict
between Franklin and the Trustees has been examined in Longaker’s Rhetoric and the Republic, which
identifies Franklin’s pragmatism with the interests of aspiring merchants, while the Trustees were
37
responsive to the more established classes’ interest in learning as a mark of gentility (141). These
conflicting class affiliations have shaped English studies from the establishment of the first
professorship of English at the College of Philadelphia, which was chartered to teach "all the liberal
Arts and Sciences, the ancient Languages, and English Tongue.”
The three-year curriculum that Smith implemented was shaped by the reforms that had been
implemented at Smith's alma mater, Marischal College, Aberdeen. According to Smith's “Account of
the College, Academy, and Charitable School,” lectures on "Classical and Rhetoric Studies" were
included in all three years of study along with English translations, orations, and compositions that
included one the fullest programs of public exercises of any colonial college. First-year students were
also lectured on mathematics, metaphysics and logic. Belletristic essays from journals such as the
Spectator were recommended "for the improvement of style and knowledge of life" (1:58-9). The
second year continued lectures on rhetoric, logic, and mathematics as well as navigation and
surveying. Lectures on natural and moral philosophy were begun in the second year and continued
through the last year, and these studies provided the subject material for a writing-across-thecurriculum course. Required texts included works on moral philosophy by Fordyce and Hutcheson and
the Preceptor edition of William Duncan's Elements of Logic. In courses on rhetoric, students read the
Preceptor along with Cicero, Demosthenes, and Quintilian.27 The influence of the reforms at Aberdeen
are evident in the experimental approach to natural philosophy. Smith adopted the works of William
Duncan and other proponents of what Howell has characterized as the “new logic,” and he expanded
moral philosophy along Scottish lines to discuss natural rights, modern history, and contemporary
theories of politics and economics.
Perhaps the most innovative aspect of the College of Philadelphia is that it was intended to be
a comprehensive institution that served not only the well to do but also working people and women.
Then as now, the study that spanned those varied purposes was English. The first professorship of
English in America was created in 1755 as a "Professor of the English Tongue and of Oratory." It was
held by Ebenezer Kinnersley. Kinnersley was supposed to supervise the English school, teach a
weekly class on oratory, and oversee all the college exercises in oratory and composition. While no
lectures from Kinnersly’s English courses remain, notes from his experimental lectures on electricity
have been preserved. Kinnersley had an international reputation as a researcher on electricity. Kant
called him the "modern Prometheus," and Smith claimed his work had been plagiarized by Franklin
(qtd. in Montgomery 80, 401). While Smith maintained that no "institution in the world can boast a
better education in oratory," Kinnersley did not actually receive adequate support to teach basic
writing and reading in the English school, or to work with all the college's students on their
compositions (Gentlemen's Magzine Feb. 1, 1757: 177). 28 Kinnersley's ill health led to a reliance on
tutors, with the most notable being James Wilson, who had emigrated from Scotland in 1765.29 Wilson
has been cited as having offered the first college lectures on English literature in America by William
Riley Parker.
Kinnersley’s courses seemed to have served the sort of service function of modern
composition courses, while Smith’s “Classical and Rhetoric Studies” was integrally involved with his
courses in natural and moral philosophy.30 Students took Smith’s rhetoric class in their second year
before they began the "Composition" studies that continued through the third and final year of the
27
Recommended readings included works by Watts and Locke in logic, a wide range of scientific texts,
and the full republican corpus in moral philosophy ranging from civic humanists such as Cicero through
Commonwealthmen such as Harrington and Sidney to natural law theorists from the Continent (Pufendorf and
Grotius) and Britain (Locke and Hutcheson). Bacon and Newton were foundational works in these studies.
28
Franklin's Observations, relative to the intentions of the original founders of the Academy in
Philadelphia (1789) recounted the forty years he had spent trying to promote English studies as an alternative to
the classics (Works 10: 95-108; also Montgomery 250-1).
29
Wilson soon moved on to study and practice law. He served in the Continental Congress and become
a leading architect of the Constitution and a Justice of the Supreme Court. Wilson returned to Philadelphia to
deliver one of the first college courses on the law in 1790, when the college had been reorganized by the
republican legislature as the University of Pennsylvania.
30
Dennis Barone has published Jasper Yeates’s notes from Smith’s “Course of Lectures on Rhetoric”
from 1760 along with an introduction on his life, the college, and the sources of his teaching.
38
curriculum. Smith devoted the first half of his rhetoric course to surveying classical theories of
invention, arrangement, delivery, and style, and in the latter half he summarized Longinus's On the
Sublime. Smith assumed that the ancients provided the best models for English composition, but
Smith’s lecture notes suggest that he largely taught the classics in translation. Smith’s approach to the
closely related studies of moral and natural philosophy was more innovative.31 Like the Newtonians he
had studied with at Aberdeen, Smith praised the virtues of inductive reasoning from experimental
inquiries. However, he did not confine instruction to speculating about the natural order in the manner
of traditional courses in physics. His notes recount how students broke up into groups to work with the
college's experimental apparatus (40). Such hands-on experience was exceptionally rare even in
colleges that publicized their commitment to scientific studies by advertising their purchases of
experimental equipment. Such equipment too often remained museum pieces to be displayed,
untouched by students in the classroom. Experimental studies of science were fundamental to the
reforms implemented at the College of Philadelphia, particularly the establishment of the first
American medical school in 1765.
Curricular reforms and class affiliations much like those at Philadelphia led to the
establishment of the second professorship of rhetoric in America in 1784 at King's College (which
later became Columbia University). When King's College opened in 1754, it instituted the same
practical service courses and neoclassical conception of literature as the College of Philadelphia, and
for the same basic reason: emerging colleges depended on public support to survive, and many
students had little more than a rudimentary background in Latin. In New York as in Philadelphia,
fewer students came from clerical backgrounds. As in Smith’s course, an oratorical conception of
literature helped to bridge the transition to a new sense of the classics. The first president of King's,
Samuel Johnson, also published newspaper articles and pamphlets that promoted the college by
stressing its emphasis on elocution and composition and promising courses on such practical subjects
as navigation and surveying (though such courses were not actually offered). While Johnson was a
conservative classicist who believed that all clergymen should master Hebrew, he found that many
students did not even know Latin. To meet their needs, he drew up anthologies of the classics to teach
Latin declensions along with lessons on morality and style (see Humphrey 162).32 In less traditional
institutions, Latin was already losing its centrality in general education by the end of the eighteenth
century. No pretence was made at Kings’ to require students to speak Latin, for English was used as
the language of instruction, as at Philadelphia and other emerging colleges. At New York as
elsewhere, learned languages lost their cross-curricular emphasis and became little more than a foreign
language requirement, and learned reasoning ceased being confined to the form of syllogistic
disputations. Only one such disputation was offered at commencements before 1762, and only one was
included after 1765 (Humphrey 165; Roach 9-10). These changes shifted literacy studies from a
classical to a modern footing, much as Smith had begun to do by teaching classical literature in
translation in his “Classical Studies and Rhetoric” course.
Johnson himself taught rhetoric, elocution, and composition courses that surveyed classical
theories of invention, arrangement, and delivery, while emphasizing the basics of English grammar
and style (see Potter Debating 34). This neoclassical approach was guided by the sort of educational
vision that is elaborated in Johnson's Elementa Philosophica (1752), which was one of the first
philosophy textbooks written in America. Elementa documents how Johnson attempted to maintain an
The links between moral and natural philosophy were part of the college’s debts to reformers at
Aberdeen. A good example of such Newtonian approaches to politics and ethics is provided by Samuel Jones's
notebook from Francis Alison's course on "Practical Philosophy," which will be discussed in more detail in a
later section. Notes on the "Law of Nature" from Alison's moral philosophy course are included side by side with
lectures on "A System of Nature" from a natural science course.
32
In the Introduction to Philosophy (first published in the Republic of Letters in 1731), Johnson
complained that students learned only a "smattering in a few of the Latin classics" and remained "scandalously
ignorant" of Greek. He recommended requiring a “good competency" in both Latin and Greek for entering
students, though he was hard pressed to admit less qualified student to build enrollments at King's, which only
graduated about five students annually up to the Revolution (Works 2:315). Another professor at New York in
1785 complained that it was absurd to lecture students on the "beauties of the classics” when students could not
even understand them (qtd. in Roach 17, 18).
31
39
enclosed system of knowledge by drawing on the idealism of Bishop Berkeley to chart varied fields of
study by the providential order of the human mind. Like the rest of Johnson’s teaching, Elementa is a
transitional source that had clear continuities with the scribal compendia that had traditionally been
used to reduce all learning to a memorizable system. Johnson divides all knowledge into philosophy
and philology, with the latter set out as the primary concern of students until age fifteen or sixteen
(which was about the average age of a college student in the middle of his studies). After studies of
ancient and modern languages, students moved on to philosophy, with the final year devoted to moral
philosophy, including pneumatics, ethics, politics, economics, and natural theology. 33 Johnson left
King’s College when it was taken over by the republican state legislature after the Revolution. At the
new University of Columbia a professorship in rhetoric was established in 1784 to teach a senior
course that was advertised as including the "Rise and progress of Language—Universal Grammar,
Rise and progress of the Written Character—Criticism," with students required to submit essays to be
corrected and then inspected by the administrators of the college (rptd. Roach 20).
A departure from classicism was also made in the literature and composition class that was
taught at Princeton by John Witherspoon. Witherspoon began teaching his course in "Composition and
Criticism" when he emigrated from Scotland to become president of the college at Princeton in 1768.
Since the college did not receive even the limited government funding provided to the colleges at New
York and Philadelphia, Witherspoon and his predecessors depended upon donations and student fees.
In one appeal for support, Address to the Inhabitants Jamaica, and Other West India Islands, in Behalf
of the the College of New Jersey (1772), Witherspoon stressed that English composition and elocution
were taught throughout a program of studies that culminated with courses in history, natural and moral
philosophy, and "Composition and Criticism." As at other colleges, students began their studies by
translating Cicero and concluded them with orations modeled on his. However, students' reports
suggest that Latin was moving to become something akin to a foreign language requirement (see
Guder 163-6). According to Witherspoon's own account, the first year was devoted to "Latin and
Greek, with the Roman and Grecian antiquities, and Rhetoric." The second year also included
language studies along with geography, mathematics and "the first principles of Philosophy." In the
third, "languages are not wholly omitted," but time was devoted largely to mathematics and natural
philosophy. The last year continued the studies of moral and natural philosophy, history, and a
program of public "orations of their own composition, to which all persons of any note in the
neighbourhood are invited" (Writings 109).
While the college at Princeton had been founded by the evangelical wing of the Presbyterian
Church, Witherspoon went so far as to advertise that he did not know the churches his students
attended (112). Setting out some of the same arguments that his student James Madison would use to
defend the Constitution as a representative institution, Witherspoon argued that the College of New
Jersey was a public college that was “altogether independent” of factional interests because it
represented "a public so diffusive that it cannot produce particular dependence." As a result, the
college was "as far removed, as the state of human nature will admit, from . . . mean servility in the
hope of Court favour" (111). To appeal to a "diffusive" reading public that reached to the West Indies,
Witherspoon identified Princeton as a republican bastion against "ministerial" control. Princeton was
upheld as a representative institution that balanced competing interests to promote "the spirit of liberty
and independence." From this position, schools and colleges could claim to represent not "those in
power" but the public itself (111). As with the other representative systems of self-governance, schools
and colleges taught the literate to see themselves as sharing a common oratorical literature that was
responsive to their practical needs and social aspirations. Republican values were fundamental to the
claims of colleges to be representative institutions. Those values were taught in moral philosophy
courses that provided an eclectic survey of liberal doctrines of individual freedom along with the
basics of how to draw up a contract and strike an honest deal. Before turning to those courses and the
political transformations they contributed to, I want to examine how the literate were taught to
represent themselves as spokesmen for the public.
33
Longaker aligns Johnson’s writings and teachings with Smith’s belletristic approach by their shared
conservative loyalties, religious affiliations, and class identifications (140-162).
40
Oratorical Literature and the New Learning
To understand how an oratorical stance on literature came to be seen as representing the
literate in a way that religious literature no longer did, we need to understand that moral and natural
philosophy courses were based on a sense of the experimental method that was more experiential than
scientific—in the modern sense of the term. This point is evident in Witherspoon’s observation that
“experimental knowledge is the best sort in every branch, but it is necessary in divinity because
religion is what cannot be truly understood unless it is felt” (Selected Writings 296). “Experimental”
lectures using scientific equipment were pioneered by Smith, Johnson, and other promoters of the
inductive logic of Watts (see Brubacher and Rudy 85-86). Such lectures were only the most obvious
example of the pedagogical innovations that followed upon the “new learning.” Adopting what was
known as the “comparative method,” professors such as Witherspoon surveyed differing perspectives
on issues in order to help guide students’ independent reading. This mode of learning seems so natural
to us that it is easy to forget that it only became possible when students had enough access to books
that they could conduct independent programs of reading. The comparative method of instruction was
first developed in the Dissenting academies to prepare students to speak against the restrictions
imposed on “nonconformists” (see Miller Formation). Such methods also began to be adopted in the
colonies as books became more available. The comparative method treated received beliefs as topics
for debate rather than premises for syllogisms. With the transition from syllogistic to forensic
disputations, learning ceased to be a process of reasoning deductively from indisputable premises, and
reading became a more open-ended process of inquiry that generalized from the individual experience
to broader claims that were too uncertain to be reduced to categorical syllogisms.
Lectures that surveyed sources for further reading were still a notable innovation in the latter
half of the eighteenth century. Many less effective teachers perpetuated the dictation-recitation method
through the next century. As already noted, half of Smith’s rhetoric course at Philadelphia was
devoted to dictating a compendium of Longinus’s On the Sublime because colonial bookstores did not
have sufficient numbers of even such canonical texts as Quintilian's Institutes to require students to
buy a copy, even if they could afford to do so (see Roach 4-5). Students at Philadelphia and elsewhere
were still routinely required to reduce published texts to compendia for their own use, with many such
abridgements still extant. However, such scribal practices were beginning to be questioned. At
Princeton in 1754, Tennent and Davies advertised that the college would not follow the custom of
dictating "prolix Discourses" that burdened students' memories but would instead use the "Socratic
Way of free Dialogue between Teacher and Pupil, or between the Students themselves" (rptd.
Hofstadter and Smith 93-94). In such comments, one can see how the new learning was evolving into
a new pedagogy concerned with experiential processes of inquiry, and not just rote mastery. However,
this historic evolution was not so much an application of new theories of knowledge as it was an
accommodation to changes in literacy. As students began to read and own more books, memorizing
and reciting passages must have come to seem like a waste of time, at least to those who could look
past the traditions of the learned to observe how students were learning (Blair, Account 29).
These emerging changes in learning and literacy shaped the origins of perhaps the most
distinctly American course in the college curriculum—the composition courses that would replace
remedial Latin courses as the gateway for broader classes of students seeking access to higher
education. While it is often assumed that composition courses were not institutionalized until a century
later, the course in "Composition and Criticism" that Witherspoon began teaching in 1768 addressed
many of the formal concerns that would come to define the teaching of composition. With an eye to
the page rather than the podium, Witherspoon discussed thesis sentences, outlining, topic sentences,
paragraph unity, punctuation, spelling, and other formal matters that only became issues when the
focus shifted from speaking to writing and print began to standardize literate usage. The formation of
English as an object of formal study was an integral part of the mid-eighteenth-century effort to reduce
English to a logical system governed by laws that were as regular as print (see Miller, Formation).
Witherspoon referred to popular attempts to regularize spelling, and he noted several other matters that
became the bugbears of composition courses but which were not seen as problems until print made
41
34
people more attentive to irregularities in usage. He provided a long list of commonly confused words
to help students use language in the methodically univocal way that only became imaginable as literate
usage began to be standardized by print with the popularization of grammars and dictionaries (242,
245n-46n). As with other modern proponents of clarity, Witherspoon systematically set about
simplifying English prose, though he found it "exceedingly difficult to bring young persons especially
to a taste for the simple way of writing" (270).
While Witherspoon addressed the conventions that would come to characterize composition
courses, he also revitalized the civic orientation of classical rhetoric. Witherspoon did not subordinate
composition to criticism or romanticize creative genius in the ways that his classmate Hugh Blair did
(see Miller, "Blair and Witherspoon"; also Longaker 177-206). Witherspoon was concerned with
teaching students how to write and speak to contemporary situations (the pulpit, bar, or senate) and
purposes (information, demonstration, persuasion, or entertainment). Though he surveyed the arts of
invention, arrangement, style, and delivery, he assumed that invention was best left to "the
spontaneous production of capacity and experience" (280). While such assumptions were
characteristic of what Howell has identified as the “new” rhetoric, Witherspoon did not accept the
view that the heated oratory of the ancients had lost its significance in an era of refined tastes and wellmanaged politics (see Blair 1:42-3). He maintained that "oratory has its chief power in promiscuous
assemblies, and there it reigned of old, and reigns still by its visible effect" (258). Witherspoon was
critical of the tendency of "persons of finer taste" to look down on those with less refinement (297).
Witherspoon was less concerned with teaching refined tastes than with preparing students to become
"members of the provincial assemblies" (304). For Witherspoon, rhetoric was a practical political art
integrally involved with the republican ideology that he taught in the course on moral philosophy
along with his course on "Composition and Criticism" (Writings 205).
Before examining the civic orientation of moral philosophy courses, I want to look beyond
what was taught to how students learned. We have only fragmentary remains of students' classroom
experiences because far more attention has traditionally been paid to what teachers taught than to how
students learned. The fullest accounts come from the societies that students founded to teach
themselves how to write and speak to issues that were important to them (see Potter, “The Literary
Society”). A typical society held weekly meetings to share compositions, debate current issues, and
practice public speaking. Members' elocution and compositions were then critiqued, sometimes by
elected peer editors. The best compositions were then copied into minute books, and some groups
even required compositions to be submitted for peer editing before being delivered in class to ensure
that they maintained the society's literary reputation. These literary and debating societies were far
more academically oriented than the fraternities that replaced them in the middle of the nineteenth
century, though the oldest surviving one was in fact the first Greek letter organization—the Phi Betta
Kappa society founded at William and Mary in 1776.
Some of the reforms that shaped early English courses were instituted by students in their
societies (see Potter, Debating 77-80). Student societies made the transition from syllogistic to
forensic disputations earlier than the formal curriculum. English literature was studied in student
societies before it was formally taught, and the essay was adopted as a model of taste and style before
it became institutionalized as the genre for teaching composition. The historical archetype of these
societies was the literary society immortalized in the Spectator. The essays from such journals were
commonly read in meetings, and some societies even circulated collections of essays that imitated the
belletristic style and stance of the Spectator. Such groups as the Brothers in Unity at Harvard went so
far as to produce handwritten collections of essays numbered in successive issues that were circulated
among the student body. Student literary societies were vital to the development of students’
independent programs of reading. The libraries of some societies were larger than those of colleges
themselves in areas that were popular with students such as modern literature and letters. Literary
societies provided collaborative venues for students to talk through the implications of what they were
34
The impact of print on concepts of usage is evident in Witherspoon's comments on punctuation.
According to Witherspoon, punctuation only became an issue as more people began writing for the press.
Witherspoon noted that only periods were commonly used in letters, though other punctuation marks were useful
to indicate pauses in texts to be read (244). These comments situate Witherspoon at the juncture where scribal
modes of literacy began to be assessed against the regularities of print.
42
learning. Dramatic performances as well as debates were organized by such societies as the Hasty
Pudding Club, which developed out of a debating society in 1795.
To demonstrate the oratorical skills that they had learned, graduates at commencement
delivered orations, debated public issues, and read their compositions. Commencement exercises
typically lasted all day, sometimes with musical “interludes” between orations, disputations, and
dialogues that might last as long as an hour each. The publication of commencement programs,
newspaper accounts, and award-winning compositions helped spread republican doctrines to
audiences who had limited access to formal education. This publicity helped to strengthen the standing
of colleges as representative institutions. For example the commencement program at Philadelphia in
1761 included a litany of republican orations on the social contract, the right to rebel to preserve the
common good, and the benefits of a mixed constitution. Similarly, at the commencement at Princeton
in 1770, orations, disputes, and dissertations argued for natural equality, the natural right to rebel
against unjust governments, the civic virtues of the non-importation agreements, and the right to
individual opinion (see Walsh 225, 158-59; also Longaker 189). Commencement disputations and
orations on slavery, independence, and religious freedom are widely available in Potter and Thomas's
The Colonial Idiom. These compositions document how print transformed a major community event
into a forum for popular political debate. Like the pamphlet literature of the time, commencement
pieces had an oratorical form that represented readers as auditors at a public assembly, creating a sort
of representative publicity that made reading a deliberative process that worked to instill respect for
the self-restraint and balanced style in a manner that characterized the oratorical literature of the time.
Fundamental to the changing dynamics of print literacy was the evolving conception of
readers as independent agents who had choices to make for themselves. An oratorical stance on
literature was attuned to the experience of readers who did not share an intense devotion to a handful
of sacred texts. This stance is powerfully apparent in one of the most rhetorically influential sentences
in the political literature of the eighteenth century:
We the People of the United States, in Order to form a more perfect Union, establish Justice,
ensure domestic Tranquility, provide for the common defence, promote the general Welfare,
and secure the Blessings of Liberty to ourselves and our Posterity, do ordain and establish this
Constitution for the United States of America.
Generations of students have joined together to recite this passage, perpetuating one of the last
elocutionary exercises still common in American classrooms. In the process of reverently reciting the
Preamble to the United States Constitution, students experience an oratorical sense of literature that is
founded upon the persuasive dynamics of “E Pluribus Unum”—“Out of many, one.” Such recitations
are rituals of self-fashioning that work to instill the balanced style and self-restrained sentiments of the
American Constitution. The Constitution is a powerful example of how the literate were represented in
the political literature of the time. The American Constitutions was written down in a single
authoritative text, while the British Constitution was an amalgamation of texts drawn from medieval
traditions and common law. As Bailyn discussed, a constitution was traditionally understood not “as
we would have it, a written document,” but “as the constituted—that is, existing—arrangement of
governmental institutions, laws, and customs” (Ideological Origins 68). This new, more literal and
literate sense of the constitution of representative forms of self-government was shaped by the
republican ideology that was taught in moral philosophy courses, and by the modes of self-fashioning
that were popularized by the periodical press, as I will discuss in the next two sections.
Moral Philosophy and the Politics of Republican Education
Insofar as the ideology of the American Revolution was formally taught, that teaching
occurred in courses on moral philosophy. According to Bailyn, the "ideological origins of the
American Revolution" included classical republicanism, "Enlightenment rationalism," English
common law, and the covenant theology of the Puritans (23-33). These sources were synthesized
within the interpretive traditions transmitted by such Scottish moral philosophers as Francis Hutcheson
and such dissenters as Philip Doddridge, Isaac Watts, Joseph Priestley, and Richard Price (40). From
these sources came the "commonplaces of the liberal thought of the time": "natural rights, the
contractual basis of society and government, [and] the uniqueness of England's liberty preserving
'mixed' constitution" (45). According to Bailyn, "the more sensitive observers were to ideological
43
issues—the more practiced in theoretical discourse—the more likely they were to find irrefutable
evidence" that there was a British conspiracy against American rights (120). From such lines of
analysis, revolutionary rhetoricians argued that the Church of England was conspiring to establish an
American bishop to suppress religious freedoms. Taxes were being raised and trade restricted to line
the pockets of corrupt ministers, who had already reduced the judiciary to dependency and imposed a
standing army to cower the American public into servility. This conspiracy was set out for the public
by influential rhetoricians such as Jefferson, Hamilton, Burr, Madison, and Richard Henry Lee, each
of whom drew upon the theories they had studied in moral philosophy courses taught by Scottish
immigrants from Scottish textbooks.
Scottish moral philosophers were among the first professors in Britain to lecture in English on
modern history, politics and culture, as I discussed in the first volume of this history of college English
studies. One of the first university courses on English literature, composition and rhetoric was taught
by Adam Smith while he was professor of moral philosophy at Glasgow from 1752 to 1764. In 1776
the birth of consumer society was heralded by the publication of Smith’s Wealth of Nations, which
was instrumental in persuading the literate to try to keep civil society free from politics to allow the
natural laws of the market to govern human relations. Smith's own moral philosophy professor,
Francis Hutcheson, had drawn on civic humanism and the natural law tradition to combine Addisonian
doctrines of "sympathy or fellow feeling" with “Newtonian” methods intended to establish political
laws as natural as the "principle of gravitation" (Introduction 21; Inquiry 198). Hutcheson was the
most influential Scottish moral philosopher in colonial America.35 Hutcheson assumed that society
was founded on the "consent of the body of the people," and thus "the general happiness is the
supreme end of all political union" (Introduction 287, System 2:226). While such doctrines are often
identified with Locke, Garry Wills has argued that Locke was less known as a political theorist than as
“the Newton of the mind—the man who revealed the workings of knowledge, the proper mode of
education, and the reasonableness of belief" (Inventing 171). Unlike Locke, Hutcheson set out two
arguments of critical importance at the time: enslaving a people violates natural law, and colonies have
a right to seek independence when their interests are not being served by union. At a greater distance
from Hobbes and closer to the optimism of the Enlightenment, Hutcheson set out a liberal viewpoint
that valued commerce and refinement, with traditional virtues founded on a moral sense that was
governed by natural laws that promoted the common good.
Hutcheson's Introduction to Moral Philosophy was taught by Francis Alison at the College of
Philadelphia. Alison had graduated from Edinburgh in 1732, and he corresponded with Hutcheson. In
students’ notes from Alison's "Practical Philosophy" course from 1760, one can see how students
composed compendia of Hutcheson's discussions of the three parts of moral philosophy: ethics, "the
Law of Nature," and "Politicks and Oeconomicks." From the "Constitution" of human nature, Alison's
course turned to the natural laws governing political relations and economic transactions. The course
concluded by stressing the need to balance political powers in a mixed constitution. Alison follows
Hutcheson in maintaining a civic conception of society that did not reduce politics to the libertarian
essentials of protecting personal rights and private property. Hutcheson did not assume that the social
compact was formed as a means to escape a violent state of nature that threatened property, as Hobbes
and Locke had maintained, but because people need others to develop their benevolent nature.
Hutcheson argued for "inalienable" rights to life, liberty, opinion, and labor, but not to property,
because property may be taken in the interest of the common good. This distinction from Locke is one
of the most distinctive aspects of the Declaration of Independence, and Wills argues quit convincingly
that Jefferson’s source is Hutcheson. 36 Unfortunately, Jefferson was less persuaded by Hutcheson’s
35
Hutcheson was studied at Philadelphia, Princeton, King's, Brown, and Harvard. The only other work
to have such influence was a similar Scottish text, David Fordyce's "Elements of Moral Philosophy," which was
widely available in the Preceptor (1748). The Preceptor passed through eight editions in a half century, and the
Elements (1754) went through four editions separate editions within fifteen year.
36
According to Wills, "those who think Jefferson had to derive his natural right of revolution from
Locke have no direct textual parallels to draw on. But the parallels within the Scottish school are everywhere"
(238). Hutcheson’s general assumption that virtue should be measured according to "the greatest happiness for
the greatest numbers" became "a touchstone for enlightened thought" (Hutcheson, Inquiry 164; qtd. in Wills,
44
idea that "nature makes none Masters or Slaves" (Jones, "Practical Philosophy"). A collection of
Hutcheson's arguments against slavery was in fact the first of his writings to be published in America.
Hutcheson's civic philosophy was also taught by John Witherspoon at Princeton.
Witherspoon’s course provided a comparative survey of the sources of American revolutionary
thought, including the civic humanism of Cicero and Aristotle, natural law authorities such as Grotius
and Pufendorf, the Whig canon that included Locke, and Scottish moral philosophers such as Fordyce,
Ferguson, Kames, Hume, Reid, Smith, and Hutcheson. Following Hutcheson, Witherspoon surveyed a
broad domain that included ethics, politics, and jurisprudence, moving from natural law to natural
rights and economic relations in the ways that Hutcheson had laid out. Witherspoon also maintained
that there is no moral justification for slavery, that commerce improves sociability, and that property
rights are subordinate to "common utility," rather than being an inalienable right and the principal
motive for the social contract (227, 181). Like Hutcheson, Witherspoon also assumed that "selfinterest" and the public good were balanced by a moral sense. From that principle followed many of
the doctrines that his student James Madison would draw upon to help compose and defend the
Constitution. For Witherspoon, and Madison, the inevitable exercise of self-interest could only be
controlled in the constitution of powers is "so balanced that when every one draws to his own interest
or inclination, there may be an over poise upon the whole" (203).37 The virtues of a balanced
constitution were a commonplace of republicanism, and Witherspoon and Alison helped teach those
maxims to the generation who would constitute the representative systems of self-governance that
would define the American national identity.38According to Witherspoon, it was a matter of common
sense that "men are originally and by nature equal, and consequently free," with all duly constituted
authority resting on consent (191).
Witherspoon has been characterized by Pocock as "the one authentically radical Scottish
voice" of this era, but he has also been criticized for introducing a common-sense philosophy that
treated received beliefs as the dictates of a natural faculty (Political Thought 276; see Martin and
May). Witherspoon in fact only made a few passing references to the commonsense philosophy of
James Beattie and Thomas Reid to support his general assumption that "the dictates of common sense.
. . . are the foundations of all reasoning, and without them, to reason is a word without meaning"
(173). To save the Newtonian synthesis of natural religion and natural philosophy, Witherspoon had to
refute Hume's criticisms of "the certainty of our belief upon cause and effect, upon personal identity
and the idea of power" (Witherspoon 172). Commonsense philosophy legitimized the cultural values
of the literate by founding established conventions on a natural sense. Appeals to the good sense of the
common person also had less conservative potentials. That potential is pointedly apparent in Thomas
Paine’s Common Sense, which sold a half a million copies within a few months of its publication in
1776. The title of the work was reportedly suggested to Paine by Benjamin Rush, who had persuaded
Witherspoon to come to Princeton and was one of the most devoted American students of Scottish
culture. Paine’s Common Sense prepared readers to understand the doctrines of the Declaration of
Independence.39 According to Wills, Jefferson's sense of "self-evident truths" came from the
Inventing 150). As Wills discusses, Jefferson’s debts to Hume, Smith, Ferguson, Kames, and especially
Hutcheson are well documented in his accounts of his studies and libraries (see also Hamowy).
37
This passage from the course of lectures that Madison studied with Witherspoon encapsulates the
principle of the balance of powers that is set out in the most noted essays in the history of American political
literature, Madison’s Federalist essays. Witherspoon himself spoke on “that enlarged system called the balance
of power" in a speech in Congress supporting the Articles of Confederation (Selected Writings 151).
38
Alison's students included five signers of the Declaration, while the two major proposals and the
compromise plan for the Constitution were all put forward by Princeton graduates, who outnumbered the
graduates of Yale and Harvard combined at the Constitutional Convention (Norris 73). Witherspoon's most
influential student was Madison, who stayed on after graduation to study with Witherspoon and in the process
became Princeton's first graduate student (Thorp, et al. 6-9).
39
After studying with a Scottish clergyman, Jefferson studied at William and Mary with another Scot,
William Law. Jefferson wrote in his "Autobiography" that Law's instruction in "Ethics, Rhetoric and Belles
Lettres" "probably fixed the destinies of my life" (3, 2). Like William Smith, Law had studied at Marischal
College in Aberdeen in the early 1750s, when Alexander Gerard was reforming the curriculum according to new
logic to move through an inductive study of the arts and sciences to culminate with studies of “moral science”
45
Newtonianism of the common-sense school (183). Jefferson was broadly influenced by Thomas
"Reid's egalitarian epistemology, his humble empiricism, and his communitarian morality," as is
evident in Jefferson's famous comment that his purpose in composing the Declaration was "to place
before mankind the common sense of the subject in terms so plain and firm as to command their
assent" (Wills 184, 191). Jefferson often defended the good sense of the common person, as in the
famous letter where he stated that if a "moral case" was stated to "a ploughman and a professor," "the
former will decide it as well and often better than the latter, because he has not been led astray by
artificial rules" (qtd. in Wills 184).
The principles of commonsense philosophy had both conservative and liberal implications, but
what is most important here is how those principles shaped college graduates’ sense of their relations
to a reading public that was in the process of developing a shared national identity. Common-sense
philosophy maintained the consistency of science and religion by drawing upon the inductive logic of
new science to account for the vagaries of individual experience in a time of revolutionary change.
While the more introspective orientation of Scottish moral philosophy worked to preserve traditional
values by founding them on the logic of human experience, the more sociological impetus of moral
philosophy helped to make it into a seedbed for the social sciences. Commonsense doctrines were
particularly instrumental in helping to constitutie an American cultural identity that combined a
pragmatic bent with an assimilationist impetus that was powerfully hegemonic. I discuss the
hegemonic workings of common sense more fully in the first volume of my history of college English.
Drawing upon Gramsci’s philosophy of intellection as a sociological process, I argued that Scottish
moral philosophy was quite attentive to the grounds upon which intellectuals articulate their relations
to the historical groups that they purport to represent. As Gramsci has discussed, "it was natural that
'common sense' should have been exalted,. . . . when there was a reaction against the principle of
authority represented by Aristotle and the Bible. It was discovered indeed that in 'common sense' there
was a certain measure of 'experimentalism' and direct observation of reality, though empirical and
limited" (348). In this respect, it was “natural” for common sense to be invoked against both outmoded
beliefs and radical challenges to traditional hierarchies at a juncture when the literate were
refashioning their shared sense of themselves.
The Reading Public that Became the Republic
In previous sections, I have explored how literacy studies shifted from a logical to a rhetorical
footing with the transition from Latin to English as the language of instruction in higher education.
That transition turned on the republican standpoint set out in moral philosophy courses. In this section,
I will examine how the public sphere was being transformed by print to create a national audience.
According to Habermas, a "structural transformation" of the public sphere occurred in the early
eighteenth century in Britain, a trend that I have identified with the Great Awakening that fueled the
growth of the periodical press and the debates over the revolution that established the ideological
framework for the reading public that became the republic. As commerce expanded, “news letters”
and then newspapers appeared to circulate information of distant markets and political developments.
In Britain, parliament began to rely on the press to publicize its position when opposition parties
created journals to appeal to public opinion. The periodical press expanded in the first decades of the
eighteenth century from debates on politics and news on commerce to create a middle-class reading
public whose conventions and aspirations became subjects of popular discussion in journals of taste
and manners such as the Spectator. According to Habermas, these developments entailed a structural
transformation that expanded civil society beyond the realm of private commerce and domestic
relations to create a print sphere that represented “the people” in new ways. In the colonies, this
transformation was legitimized by the republican values taught in moral philosophy courses. Courses
in rhetoric and composition were instrumental in formalizing the roles, relations, and purposes that
print was opening up to the reading public.
As in Britain, the periodical press was instrumental in expanding and consolidating the
reading public. British newspapers first appeared in the middle of the seventeenth century as
(see Miller Formation). Law had studied with William Duncan, whose Elements of Logic provided the inductive
argumentative framework for the Declaration of Independence according to Howell.
46
governmentally approved organs of publicity. Because it had not secured such approval, the first
American newspaper, Boston's Publick Occurrences Both Forreign and Domestick, appeared in just
one issue in 1690. The second, third, and fifth American newspapers also appeared in Boston, which
had five newspapers and 20,000 inhabitants by 1735.40 When the Stamp Tax was imposed thirty years
later in an attempt to tax the circulation of information, newspapers were being published in every
colony except Vermont. Newspapers were first published in commercial centers, generally by printers,
and often by printers who were postmasters. Cheap access to the mail gained importance as
newspapers began to circulate more widely, with networks of printers exchanging information and
writings through the mails. The four to six pages of these early papers were filled with a hodgepodge
of speeches, proclamations, ship arrivals, and more international than local news, which continued to
circulate mostly through conversation. A page or two of advertisements were also essential to make a
profit. The circulation of news depended on the patronage of merchants. According to Brown, "not
only were they the chief patrons of newspapers, as advertisers and subscribers, but their strategic role
in their communities' information system meant that they, even more than clergymen, lawyers, or
magistrates, defined what was newsworthy" (115). In the colonies, as in Britain, newspapers were both
a vehicle of commerce and a commodity, and they provided a media for publicizing politics and
commerce that gained importance with the expansion of what Adam Smith termed “commercial
society.”
Up to the middle of the century, the colonial press followed trends set in the capital, with
reports on commerce and politics expanding to include essays on the tastes and manners of civil
society. Essays from the Spectator and the London Magazine had often been imitated, or simply
reprinted, in newspapers such as Franklin's Pennsylvania Gazette. Franklin had hoped to publish the
first American magazine, but his competitor, William Bradford, hired away his editor. In 1741
Bradford published the American Magazine; or a Monthly View of the Political State of the British
Colonies, followed several days later by Franklin's General Magazine and Historical Chronicle, for
all the British Plantations in America.41 A magazine provided a storehouse of poetry, essays, political
debates, and extracts from books and periodicals. Subscribers were promised that "every Reader that
can afford One Shilling a Month, may in a few Years be furnish'd with a Sett of Books, from whence
Tradesmen, Husbandmen and even Wives and Children may gather much Learning as well as much
Entertainment" (American Magazine 1743: iii). “Magazine” was also a term used for pocket libraries
such as The Young Man's Magazine: Containing the Substance of Moral Philosophy and Divinity,
Selected from the Works of the Most Eminent for Wisdom, Learning and Virtue, Among the Ancients
and Moderns and The Young Misses Magazine. Containing Dialogues between a Governess and
Several Young Ladies her Scholars. By popularizing literate tastes and aspirations to broader classes
of readers, the literature of self-improvement helped to legitimize college English studies until they
came to rely on the institution of public school systems in the early national period.
Broader audiences learned to respect the increasingly secular authority of the literate by
reading magazines that taught readers republican values and the proprieties of English taste and usage.
The first issue of Bradford's American Magazine; or a Monthly View of the Political State of the
British Colonies included reports of political debates intermingled with lessons on the social contract,
the English Constitution, and classical exemplars. This republican framework enabled writers to set
out lines of argument that "return immediately into Maryland from Sparta" (35). Bradford's short40
The fifth colonial newspaper was also published without governmental approval. That paper, James
Franklin's New England Courant, departed from its predecessors by being modeled on the essays of the
Spectator rather than on the reportorial style of early English newspapers such as the London Gazette. Benjamin
Franklin's Silence Dogood essays were published anonymously in his brother's paper. Those essays and other
pieces satirized learned pretensions and affected manners as well as the government. The Spectator was also the
model for the next American newspaper, the New-England Weekly Journal (1727).
41
I will discuss several American Magazines that can be distinguished by their dates: American
Magazine; or a Monthly View of the Political State of the British Colonies (1741); American Magazine and
Historical Chronicle (1743-46); American Magazine and Monthly Chronicle (published by William Smith from
1757 to 1758); American Magazine or General Repository (1769); and finally Noah Webster's American
Magazine (1787-8). Each was short-lived because the ideological and commercial infrastructure for a national
reading public was only emerging.
47
lived effort was followed in 1743 by the American Magazine and Historical Chronicle. Readers of "all
Ranks, and of different Sentiments in Religion, Politicks, &c." were invited to subscribe to the journal,
which included poetry, accounts of foreign customs, biographies, belletristic essays, parliamentary
debates, reports of experiments, and commentaries on social issues such as the status of women
(1743:i). Readers were introduced to a republic of letters centered in capitals such as London and
Paris, but which also included accounts of provincial centers such as Edinburgh and its university.
Essays presented Newtonian perspectives on the balance of self-interest and benevolence in human
nature and a well constituted state. Essays on rhetoric and belles lettres taught readers to defer to
classical authorities, British models, and elocutionary principles
An account of how those with less education taught themselves to imitate literate taste and
usage is provided by the most famous work of self-improvement in the history of American literature,
Franklin’s Autobiography. Franklin recounts how he formed a group that operated in the same manner
as student literary societies. Like those societies, Franklin’s Junto Club was modeled on the club
described in the essays of the Spectator. Franklin’s group included uneducated printers, a shoemaker,
a scrivener, a surveyor, a joiner, and a clerk (Autobiography 48). After parsing the sentences and
sentiments of the Spectator, meetings turned to critiquing individuals’ compositions and practicing the
arts of conversation. Franklin’s literacy narrative documents how belletristic essays and literary
societies spread cosmopolitan tastes among provincials with little access to formal education. Franklin
relates how he studiously eliminated unreserved assertions such as “’certainly’ and ‘undoubtedly’”
from his speech and writing in order to develop a less self-assertive style (11). Franklin’s literacy
narrative provided a model for self-instruction much like those provided by the religious literature that
previous generations had studied to form their own conversion narratives. Franklin advised readers to
imitate the deferential style of “modest and sensible men, who do not love disputation.” Franklin
internalized that style as many other provincials did, by painstakingly imitating the syntax of the
Spectator and then closing the book to see if he could express his ideas in its style. The “spectator” of
the Spectator essays was Roger de Coverly, a cosmopolitan gentleman who carefully observed how
feelings played out in the gestures of others in order to assess their characters, while carefully
monitoring his own expressions to avoid disturbing polite company with heated controversies. The
“Spectator” was a representative spokesman for the values of self-governance, but the belletristic
concern for polite decorum did not play out as well in Revolutionary America as it did in post-Union
Scotland. While impartiality was less of a virtue in a time of war, Americans also learned to respect
the well-balanced constitution of the man of letters as a representation for the virtues of self-restraint.
Essays composed for the press and the classroom document how cosmopolitan tastes
circulated through the British cultural provinces to shape the assumptions upon which college English
courses were founded. A particularly relevant example is the account of a Scottish literary society
modeled upon the Spectator Club that was reprinted in the American Magazine and Historical
Chronicle from the London Magazine (1745:529-30). Such essays provided models for provincials to
form their own societies, as Franklin and many students in many colleges did. The reprinting of
anonymous articles from cosmopolitan journals provided models for authorship to speak as
representative figures rather than as individuals. This distinction is strikingly apparent in the
circulation of another essay, "An Essay on Taste" which appeared in the American Magazine and
Historical Chronicle in 1744. The essay recounted the polite commonplace that "the Design of
Schools, the Use of Universities, the Benefit of Conversation, should all centre" on inculcating taste
because it "comprehends the whole Circle of Civility and Good Manners and regulates Life and
Conduct" (468). What is notable about this commonplace theme is that this exact same essay had also
been submitted by David Clerk in 1740 in the first university course to stress English composition and
literature—John Stevenson’s class at Edinburgh (Miller Formation). Clerk likely lifted the essay from
a London journal, and the American Magazine later took the piece from the same source without
acknowledgement—a common practice before modern concepts of individual authorship were
instituted. As evident in both these essays, colonials looked to Scotland as a province that was
industriously improving itself by imitating the tastes and manners of the capital. The best example of
how provincial ambitions were mediated through cosmopolitan tastes may well be the formation of
48
college English itself. The formative paradigm of “rhetoric and belles letters” paired an ancient
discipline with a Scottish appropriation of a French term to teach English into Americans.42
In the periodical press, as in the classroom, belletristic essays provided readers with modes of
expression that were more broadly representative than those that had characterized the scribal
curriculum. Students were given the opportunity to contribute essays of taste in another American
magazine, the American Magazine and Monthly Chronicle edited by William Smith from 1757 to
1758. The journal set out to provide opportunities for "our young Students to become literary
adventurers" under the "Safety" of their professors' editorial supervision.43 Writers and readers
corresponded in essays that adopted the form of letters—a common stylistic contrivance before the
essay became established as a genre unto itself. Essays were cast in the form of correspondence from
the "Planter" (who spoke for the landed interest), the "Prattler" (who was characterized as a ladies'
man); the "Hermit" (who played the part of the ascetic muse), and the "Antigallican" (who spoke
against the corruption of civic virtues by French refinements). These correspondents enabled the
journal to hold a mirror up to readers' experiences, as the religious literature of the previous century
had until essay journals such as the Tatler, Idler, and Spectator came to provide more broadly
representative representations of literate experience. Narrators positioned themselves as observers of
popular manners and printed letters from characteristic readers. Before correspondents became a
synonym for news reporters, “correspondents” submitted letters to the editor that modeled the modes
of expression and response of representative readers by quite literally writing them into the text.
Such journals helped to establish the genre of the essay as it would come to play out in
English classes. Such essays spoke from personal experiences in a conversational style that could be
savored by anyone with taste—and could thereby serve to distinguish those who had taste from those
who did not. By characterizing his correspondents as representative figures, an editor such as Smith
could speak from readers’ experiences in his own terms. This ventriloquist act parallels the roles
played out by teachers in their editing of students’ essays. Smith’s didactic spokesman was the
Prattler. As a representative for "persons of leisure," the Prattler held up "the Glass to folly, wherein
she may contemplate her own visage, and perceive what it would otherwise be difficult to persuade her
of" (1757:76). Readers stepped into the mirror by joining in the ironical reflections on the characters
the Prattler describes. Because the Prattler assumed it would be immodest to describe himself, he
enlists "Dick Dimple" to do so. Dimple characterized the Prattler as "little better than a fool," but the
butt of the joke ends up being Dimple himself as readers come to realize that he resented having his
self-indulgent vanities criticized by the Prattler. Such transparent comedies of manners lacked the
nuanced ironies of their cosmopolitan sources. Some of the essays drop such pretenses altogether and
adopt a straightforwardly didactic stance intended to "inlarge the understanding, refine the manners,
and mend the heart," and thereby to "reluminate the dying virtue of our country" (1758:169).
In comparison with the sophisticated cultural politics played out in London periodicals,
colonial writers tended to be amateur literati who had to earn their way with other skills—sometimes
their skills at putting letters into print. As Botein discusses, American printers remained “men of
letters” for almost a century after printing had been reduced to a “mechanics trade” in London. From
the Restoration, British booksellers had begun to take control of the publishing process by buying
copyrights from authors and hiring printers (“Printers” 14-5). Because most books were imported,
American printers tended to rely more on periodical literature, which was often written by themselves
and others in their communities. In the decades between the Great Awakening and Revolution,
colonial writers and readers developed a more reciprocal relationship than the commercialized modes
of authorship that first emerged in the capital.
The representative politics of the American reading public shaped the constitution of the
republic. Against the traditional assumption that all Britons had a "virtual representation" in
42
The cultural interactions entailed within the term rhetoric and belles lettres are all the more notable
because, as the OED documents, belles letters was pivotal to the eighteenth-century transition from broadly
humanistic conceptions of literature as all eloquent writings to the narrower conception that distinguished
imaginative literature by its distinctive emotional effect. In the nineteenth century, belletristic became
distinguished from aesthetic by a stylistic conception of literature identified with provincial tastes.
43
Alison made these comments in a letter of February 17, 1757 to Ezra Stiles, one of many he wrote to
the conservative President of Yale (Alison Letters, Presbyterian Historical Society).
49
Parliament, colonials adopted a "medieval" conception of representation that maintained that an
elected official had to have a reciprocal relationship with his community to speak for its interests
(Bailyn, Ideological Origins 163-66). Colonials conceived of political representation in ways that were
based on their experience in closely knit communities. The critical transformation of the public sphere
came when state attempts to regulate private enterprise led to public debates over taxes, capital, and
consumption. This intervention "became 'critical' also in the sense that it provoked the critical
judgment of a public making use of its reason" (Habermas 24). In the colonies, the trigger was the
Stamp Act, which was explicitly targeted at the juncture where commerce converged with the
circulation of information, including the documents critical to the legal profession. The government
was attempting to regulate not just commerce and consumption but all paper used for public purposes,
including legal documents as well as books and newspapers. When colonial assemblies were
disbanded for publishing critical pamphlets, the press became crucial to publicize non-importation
agreements, coordinate actions, and provide credibility for ad hoc assemblies as representatives of the
public. The periodical press began to reach a national audience as the postal service became more
efficient, helping to raise the number of periodicals from 23 to 44 between 1764 and 1775.
Revolutionary rhetoricians often used the anonymity of print to represent themselves as
members of the community, as John Dickinson did in his famous "Letters from a Farmer in
Pennsylvania" to the Pennsylvania Chronicle (1767-8). This mode of representation was adopted in
the most widely read piece of political literature from the era. Paine used the fact that Common Sense
was anonymously published to position his persona above "every thing which is personal among
ourselves" as "individuals" (24). Paine has been characterized as "the first anglophone theorist of
democratic revolution in a capitalist society" (Pocock, "Empire" 30), but he presented himself simply
as an anonymous "AUTHOR." From that stance, he invited his reader to assume "the true character of
a man, and generously enlarge his views beyond the present day" to view "the cause of America" as
"the cause of all mankind," an issue "not local, but universal," concerned as it is with "the natural
rights of all Mankind" (36, 23). As a representative “AUTHOR,” Paine composed a national audience
where no nation existed by situating himself and his readers in the world of print, an expansive domain
where "common sense" was removed from received beliefs and situated in the correspondence of
enlightened readers and writers.
Conclusion: The Formation of English and the Transformation of Civil Society
The first professorship of English in America was established in the most broadly based
colonial college—a hybrid institution that combined academies for women and “mechanicks” with a
college intended to provide an “English education” to prepare students for "any business, calling, or
profession" (Works 7:252). As a self-educated man of print, Franklin saw how cheap books had spread
learning to the "common people," and he perceived that the new learning made learned languages
"absolutely unnecessary" for "acquiring knowledge" (Works 10:113). While Franklin was not entirely
successful in breaking from classicism, he provides an historical alternative for thinking about English
studies as a practical discipline concerned with preparing students for public life. Such concerns were
instrumental in shaping the first college English courses. Composition, rhetoric, and the oratorical
literature of the time were set out as a program of study that was closely related with studies of
modern history, politics, and science to create a curriculum that was responsive to the needs of a
broader educated public. While there were tensions between the commercial aspirations of students
and the classical backgrounds of Smith and the Trustees at Philadelphia, at Princeton Witherspoon
drew upon rhetoric’s civic vision to develop a more synthetic philosophy of liberal education. In one
of his appeals for public support, Witherspoon advised parents who had risen "to opulence" "through
their own activity and diligence" to ensure that their children received "a liberal Education" to instill a
taste for moderate self-improvement (Writings 103). To appeal to such audiences, Witherspoon drew
on republican virtues to teach "virtuous industry and active public spirit" (Writings 146). Whether
inflected by republican sentiments or pragmatic aspirations, English studies emerged from expansion
of education to those whom Longaker has characterized as “the emergent and the established
bourgeoisie” (139).
The mercantile and manufacturing classes found much to value in the republican synthesis of
public duties and private rights that was transmitted through courses in moral philosophy and rhetoric
50
in emerging colleges such as those at Princeton, New York, and Philadelphia. Moral philosophy
courses provided students with a civic philosophy that legitimized commerce, private rights, and
public debate, while courses in rhetoric and belles lettres taught students how to represent themselves
as models of self-restraint and the public good. These courses contributed to the expansion and
consolidation of the reading public by formalizing the conventions of English and the natural laws of a
laissez-faire political economy that provided a model for the reading public as a domain for the free
exchange of ideas between autonomous individuals. The expansion of the educated public by print and
the standardization of educated taste and usage shaped the methods and mission of English studies.
Students had traditionally read more intensively than extensively. All that needed to be known had
been reduced to compendia that could be memorized and declaimed, with logic defined as the art of
deducing individual obligations from unquestionable premises, and rhetoric the art of embellishing
such received truths. The transition to forensic disputations and the introduction of the comparative
method of instruction treated received beliefs as topics for debate. Such topics were examined against
the diverse views accessible through print, and then debated in an informal manner that was broadly
applicable to public life. The new learning was introspective as well as expansive. Students were
taught to look inward to observe the natural workings of their faculties. This process of introjection
modeled human psychology according to the natural laws that balanced self-interest and the common
good within the general economy.
The teaching of moral philosophy and English assumed greater importance at New York,
Philadelphia and Princeton than in New England because the diversity of the middle colonies created a
need to instill a unifying cultural ideology. This need has shaped the teaching of English ever since it
was introduced into comparatively broad-based colleges in the eighteenth-century British provinces.
William Smith was the most explicit about the purposes of teaching English to Americans. While he
was himself an immigrant, he fostered public anxieties about foreigners, particularly Germans, who
comprised an estimated one third of the population of Pennsylvania. In pamphlets such as A Brief
View of the Conduct of Pennsylvania, he called for English-only laws to enable only English speakers
to vote. He also maintained that legal transactions should only be in English, and non-English
publications should be outlawed. As with later promoters of English-only provisions, Smith also
looked to the public schools to ensure that immigrants learned to obey the rules of taste and usage.
Smith and Franklin were both active in the Society for Promoting English among the Germans, which
raised funds for schools and clerics to teach immigrants the English way of life. Smith opposed efforts
to attract German students to Princeton because he did not want to see the New Lights' antiestablishmentarian evangelism spread among immigrants (Turner 316). To promote the College of
Philadelphia as a bastion of English values, he appealed to the Society for the Propagation of the
Gospel in Foreign Parts for support, arguing that "Education, besides being necessary to support the
Spirit of liberty & Commerce, is the only means for incorporating these foreigners with ourselves"
(rptd. Smith, Life 1:29-38).
In response to the popular perception that Smith did not support democratic values, his
students presented their notebooks to the Trustees in 1756 to show that his moral philosophy course in
"Ethics, Government, and Commerce" only taught the doctrines of "Grotius, Puffendorf, Locke, and
Hutcheson; writers whose sentiments are equally opposite to those wild notions of Liberty, that are
inconsistent with all government, and to those pernicious Schemes of Government which are
destructive of true Liberty" (Minutes 1:70-1). This republican ideology addressed itself to the area that
was central to the eighteenth-century transformation of the public sphere: the zone of contact between
government and commerce that became a critical site for public debate when politics and commerce
were publicized by the periodical press. The republican virtues of a balanced constitution legitimized
the politicization of the reading public as a domain of deliberative debate over the public good, while
also maintaining that self-interest and the public good were best balanced by resting power on
individuals of property because only they possessed a lasting stake in the common good. Print
mediated the emergence of possessive individualism by constituting a discursive domain that in
principle was open to all—all who could buy books and had been taught to respect them. Those who
possessed literacy and had internalized its logic were free to participate in public debate, and the
transformation of the reading public into a forum for such debate consolidated the virtues of a
balanced constitution that treated citizens as autonomous individual property holders.
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CHAPTER THREE
WHEN COLLEGES WERE LITERARY INSTITUTIONS
The two most prolific branches of literature in America are journalism and educational works.
. . . Newspapers and school-books are, therefore, the characteristic form of literature in the
United States. . . . There is, however, still another phase of our literary condition equally
significant; and that is the popularity of what may be termed domestic reading—a species of
books intended for the family, and designed to teach science, religion, morality, the love of
nature, and other desirable acquisitions.
Henry T. Tuckerman, “Sketch of American Literature” (1867; rptd. Backus 357)
In his often reprinted survey of American literature, Tuckerman set out a pre-modern
conception of literature that included the religious writings of the seventeenth century, the oratory of
the Revolutionary era, and the magazine literature of the antebellum period. Literature and eloquence
were closely associated terms in the antebellum period. Graff identified this broad conception of
literature with an "oratorical culture" that "pervaded the college and linked the classical courses with
the courses in English rhetoric and elocution, with the literary and debating societies, and with the
literary culture outside" (35). These relationships shaped the founding of the first professorships of
English, as I discussed in the last chapter. In this chapter I will follow through to examine the cultural
networks that were formed by magazines, literary societies, lyceum lecture circuits, teacher institutes,
and the proliferating numbers of colleges and academies. These networks expanded as access to
schooling began to increase dramatically with the spread of common schools. To staff those schools,
academies and teacher institutes were established, and these institutions provided women, working
people, and African Americans with opportunities to earn an independent living by teaching, writing,
and lecturing in various community forums. These networks provide a vital frame of reference for
assessing the development of college English studies as a field of cultural production that is shaped by
broader social movements. Early nineteenth-century abolitionist, suffragist, labor, and religious
movements provide a rich historical context for assessing how literacy, literacy studies, and the literate
evolve in tandem as groups gain access to the means of expression needed to represent their collective
experience and claim their individual rights (see Calhoun).
To expand our historical perspective on English studies, I will review a transitional conception
of professionalism—“civic professionalism,” as defined by Thomas Bender. From his studies of the
social history of the sciences, Bender concludes that "the great story of nineteenth-century science is
the shift from community-based amateur science to . . . professional disciplines" (Intellect 21). Bender
acknowledges that "community-based" academics were less scholarly than university researchers, but
he values their efforts to sustain forms of civic involvement that provide an alternative to the
specialized frames of reference that emerged as academics established disciplines as autonomous
fields of expertise. The history of our profession is integral to the broader history of professionalism.
Like many other disciplines, the teaching of English at the college level was professionalized by
abstracting its higher purposes from its basic services, as I will discuss in the next chapter. Those
services are much broader than most disciplines, insofar as the teaching of writing, reading, language,
and literature is caught up in broader social movements. The antebellum period provides a key period
in which to consider how the discipline might revitalize its expansive engagements, not just with
teaching but also with writing for the popular press and collaborating with various community and
professional groups. Assessing the development of antebellum academics as community-based
intellectuals has special relevance for areas such as women’s studies and community literacy that are
closely involved with external constituencies. Increasing numbers of English professors are coming to
value such collaborations, in part because English departments are being pressed to rearticulate the
values of their services as support for research is narrowed to invest in disciplines that generate
external revenues. Given this situation, a survey of our own discipline’s broader sources of support
may be helpful.
From the perspective of the research university, the antebellum period has been viewed as an
era of decline in higher education even though the rate of college founding was the highest in our
history. The number of colleges rose from nine after the Revolution to almost two hundred and fifty at
52
44
the Civil War, with the sharpest increases in less developed provincial areas. Many colleges served
ill-prepared students who attended for short periods in order to teach or preach, with between twenty
and forty percent of some colleges' graduates going into teaching on a long-term basis. According to
Burke's research, antebellum colleges beyond the Eastern Seaboard educated more diverse student
populations than the research universities that emerged at the end of the century because religious
associations provided scholarship funding that was unsurpassed until after the Second World War. Up
to the end of the era when they were described as literary institutions, most colleges were hybrid
institutions that compensated for the lack of formal education in their areas by including a preparatory
department, a female academy or coeducational provisions, and a seminary, law, or medical school.
Most were under-funded attempts to meet the needs of isolated towns and territories. Few students had
a classical background. To attract and keep them, colleges experimented with "English" curricula—
especially if their students planned to teach, as many women and poorer students did. These curricula
were shaped by the broad conception of literature set out by Tuckerman in the headnote include above.
These formative educational developments in college English studies were shaped by the
diversification and stratification of literacy. Penny papers and dime store novels transformed reading
from an act of private devotion into a daily source of entertainment and information. As print became
part of daily life, women and people of color became not just objects but agents of literacy. A literate
but not learned culture circulated in libraries, schools, academies, and lyceum networks, with sixty
lyceums founded in Ohio alone between 1831 and 1845. A literary figure such as Emerson delivered
his essays as lyceum lectures before publishing them in a magazine, from which they were compiled
into "readers" to be performed in classrooms as models of literary taste. Circulating through such
networks, literature was understood to include a broad range of genres—“Poetry and Fictitious Prose,
Historical, Epistolary and Essay writing” (Newman, Practical System 65). The distinction between the
literary and popular cultures was not yet clearly drawn. According to Levine, the polite and the
popular were not fully demarcated until the latter half of century, when the arts became "sacralized." A
belletristic conception of literature laid the groundwork for the development of a modern sense of
literature by helping to distinguish between reading for pleasure and for self-improvement.
To provide a broader sense of the development of college English studies in the early national
period, I will begin by surveying how republicans set out to institute representative systems of selfgovernance, including professionally-administered school systems. The spread of state-mandated
education helped build the audience for the first mass medium—the penny paper. The growth of
literacy and schooling undermined the traditional confines of higher education. In the colonial period
colleges such as Yale had reacted to the expansion of the literate public by positioning themselves as
private corporations, and in the antebellum period elite colleges sought to preserve their standing by
raising costs and standards. More accessible colleges reformed their curricula to appeal to students
with broader career aspirations. After resisting such reforms, Harvard adapted to the diversification of
literate expertise by instituting more specialized programs of study. These trends fed into the
institution of gradated educational systems, as is documented in English studies by the proliferation of
varied genres of textbooks, most notably the evolution of “readers” into anthologies of literature (see
Carr, Carr, and Schultz 81-146). These texts document how English studies adapted to the expansion
of education by shifting from a republican to a professional framework for studies of writing,
language, literature, and teaching. Composition courses became common; linguistic studies moved
away from the pedagogical project of formalizing the national language; and literary studies shifted
from an oratorical to a belletristic orientation. The foundations of the discipline were laid upon the
establishment of teaching as a “classless profession” that is well suited to the nurturing capacities of
women, as had traditionally been set out by the ideology of “republican motherhood” (see Mattingly
and Robbins). That self-effacing ideology worked to contain the aspirations of women and others who
looked to teaching as a means to advancement. Those students and their aspirations have shaped
college English studies from their origins until the present day, and their experiences provide us with a
broader field of vision from which to assess what our field has been, and could be.
44
Burke concluded that 241 colleges were established in this period. Burke and his research team only
counted institutions that actually offered instruction, rather than all that were chartered, as had been done by
Tewksbury and the others who provided the inflated numbers of failed colleges. According to Burke's research,
70% of antebellum colleges persisted into the twentieth century (14).
53
The Diversification and Consolidation of Literate Expertise
The inability of classically oriented republicans to come to terms with the populist politics of
the new republic is dramatically apparent in how John Quincy Adams lectured on the virtues of
classical oratory as Professor of Rhetoric and Oratory at Harvard while he was a U.S. Senator in 1806,
and then as a matter of principle refused to deliver campaign speeches to get reelected as President in
1828, contributing to his defeat by Andrew Jackson. Adams felt it was beneath him to speak as one of
the crowd. In his diary, he noted with disdain that "the principal leaders of the political parties are
traveling about the country from State to State, and holding forth, like Methodist preachers, hour after
hour, to assembled multitudes, under the broad canopy of heaven" (qtd. in Brown 277). Colleges
traditionally identified themselves as oratorical institutions that taught the educated to speak for the
public. As the authority of the educated became contested, colleges were drawn into the broader
project of teaching the public to defer to reasonable authorities. To constitute representative systems of
self-governance, republicans founded asylums, hospitals, prisons, schools, and colleges. As part of this
effort, the literature and language of the nation became constituted and taught as a rule-governed
system. The formalities of literacy took on increased significance with the “revolution in reading” that
was created by the penny press and common school at the turn of the nineteenth century (see
Davidson; Kaestle, et al. 53). As more people began to buy more books, more attention had to be paid
to teaching the literate how to distinguish themselves by how and what they read. These developments
had an impact on all four corners of the field: language studies gained currency from efforts to teach
the public to obey the rules of good usage; a belletristic stance on literature was adopted to distinguish
popular fictions from works of taste; rhetoric expanded to include the composition of varied print
genres; and education was transformed by the modern convergence of schooling and literacy, which
still tended to be acquired in informal and intermittent ways but was becoming more institutionalized.
A useful point of departure for assessing how education was shaped by the transition from a
republican to a professional sense of the literate’s relations to the public is provided by the career of
Benjamin Rush. As with many reformers of the revolutionary generation, he looked to education to
unify the nation. Like Jefferson, Rush sought to create a state system of education to instill the
unifying virtues of industry and economy in the general public. Rush assumed that citizens are "public
property" and should be educated as "republican machines" (14 Essays). He published several
proposals for state-funded schools for "laboring" citizens, with the most capable rising through
gradated classes to attend state colleges and a national university. This educational system would
transform outmoded hierarchies into a meritocracy in which individuals would rise in a well-ordered
manner according to their individual abilities. Rush's educational philosophy advanced the
pedagogical innovations that followed from the new learning, which I discussed in the last chapter.
Reasoning from an experiential model of education, Rush argued that students learn by doing. Mindnumbing recitations were to be replaced by exercises in observing, experimenting, and writing, and
subjects would be sequenced by the stages of child development. This educational philosophy was part
of a broader effort to translate republican modes of authority into representative systems of
professional expertise (see Meranze). While Rush helped establish at least three colleges, he also
proposed to create prisons, asylums, and hospitals in an effort to establish orderly systems of expertise
to govern various areas of public life. Rush's Essays, Literary, Moral, and Philosophical (1798)
argued for placing immigrants, indigents, and indigenous peoples under the supervision of preachers,
teachers, doctors, criminologists, and other experts. While republicans had largely relied upon
eloquence to exercise public authority, Rush set about constituting systems of expertise that would
bring the increasingly diversified public sphere under the control of experts. These efforts shifted the
public standing of the educated from a republican to a professional footing.
Linguists' efforts to reduce public usage to a rule-governed system were part of this historical
transition. The most broadly influential attempt was Noah Webster’s pronouncing dictionary. The
dictionary was packaged as the first part of the Grammatical Institute of the English Language, or
simply "The Blue-Blacked Speller." According to Webster, at its peak it was selling 200,000 copies a
year (Webster, Letters 292). The second and third parts of the Grammatical Institutes were a grammar
and a reader. While neither was as popular as Webster’s speller, his grammar went through over
twenty-five editions between 1784 and end of the century. Like other republican advocates of making
54
English into a rule-governed system, Webster felt illiterate usage undermined reasonable authority, for
example by confusing liberty with licentiousness. To teach the public to respect the rules, his
textbooks constituted authoritative standards for speaking and writing.45 According to the
advertisement he wrote for the revision of his speller in 1788, "a federal language" would be created if
all Americans were to study "the same book, that all may speak alike" (Letters 80). Webster’s
American Dictionary would be instrumental in standardizing usage, but only after his death in 1841,
when most of his spelling reforms were expunged by the Merriam brothers. The Merriams bought the
copyright and had the dictionary revised by Webster's son-in-law, Chauncey Goodrich, who had
become the first Professor of Rhetoric and Oratory at Yale in 1817. As a result of the Merriams'
national marketing, Webster's became an everyday term for dictionaries as they became commonly
consulted authorities for daily usage in ways dictionaries had not been when they circulated among the
learned in editions of a few thousand copies.
To set standards for literature, Webster founded his own American Magazine in 1787 "to
gratify every class of readers," ranging from clerics through "laborers" to "fair readers." Webster
reached out to those readers in essays such as "A Letter to A Young Gentleman Commencing his
Education.” This essay was a hybrid genre that imitated a parent’s letter to a college student to invite
readers to join in moralizing on the virtues of self-discipline, and thereby identify themselves as
members of the educated public, even if they had not been formally educated. Such self-improvement
literature helped readers who were not well bred appear well read.46 Toward that end, Webster's
American Magazine carefully distinguished literary modes of close reading from the more popular
reading habits that became commonly available with the spread of cheap print literacy:
The readers of books may be comprehended in two classes—those who read chiefly for
amusement, and those who read for instruction. The first, and far the most numerous class,
give their money and their time for private gratification; the second employ both for the
acquisition of knowledge which they expect to apply to some useful purpose. The first gain
subjects of conversation and social entertainment; the second acquire the means of public
usefulness and of private elevation of character. The readers of the first class are so numerous,
and the thirst for novelty so insatiable, that the country must be deluged with tales and fiction;
and if you suffer yourself to be hurried along with the current of popular reading, not only
your time, but your mind will be dissipated; your native faculties, instead of growing into
masculine vigor, will languish into imbecility. (Collection 300)
Novels are identified with a "dissipated" and “insatiable” taste for private amusements that debilitate
manly virtues. Such commonplace sentiments document how the anxieties and aspirations of the
literate were mediated through a genre that adopted the conventions of personal correspondence to
allow readers to moralize along with a literate father, while being tutored along with his son.
Such magazines were instrumental in constituting a national reading public. Magazine writers
such as Webster set out to appeal not to learned patrons but to the "merchants, grocers and
shopkeepers" who bought and sold their work (Letters 124). Such classes of readers increased
dramatically from 1815 to 1850, as the country grew from seventeen to thirty states and from eight to
twenty-three million. While only twelve magazines existed in 1780, forty were being published in
1810, one hundred in 1825, and almost six hundred in 1850, including The North American Review,
The Saturday Evening Post, Scientific American, Godley's Lady Book, and a host of magazines for
specialized audiences ranging from the Yale Review to the Ohio Farmer. Laborers and people of color
began to turn to the press to publicize their experience. In 1827 the Freedom's Journal was cofounded
by the first African American college graduate, John B. Ruswurm (Bowdoin College, 1826). That
same year the first labor paper also appeared, The Journeyman Mechanics Advocate. Periodicals
45
Andresen distinguishes Webster's "political conception of language" from the mechanistic model of
language change of Grimm and Bopp. Andresen rereads this "hinge period" in linguistics to identify Webster
with the origins of sociolinguistics and language education, which have been ignored in the history of linguistics
in the same ways literacy has been ignored by literary studies (68-119; see also Rollin).
46
For example, Miller's Letters from a Father to his Sons in College also combines patriarchal
condemnations of the penny press and popular novels with advice on how to become a discerning reader by
forgoing "instruction without labour" in lyceums and magazines and focusing instead on such "English classics"
as Bacon, Shakespeare, Milton, Addison, Pope, Johnson, Hume, and Beattie (160, 151; see also Robbins).
55
became nationally marketable as haphazard networks of itinerant peddlers and stage coaches were
replaced by railroad and postal systems that enabled shopkeepers to order publications (and return
them if they didn’t sell). According to Zboray, print was "one of the first industries in which firms
were required to move hundreds of thousands of units of diverse, highly complex goods to thousands
of consumers, few of whom actually needed any of the particular items" (17). To promote a taste for
consumption, the first multi-city advertising agency appeared in 1849. Such agencies helped to
support the first mass paper, The New York Sun, which had appeared in 1833, the year of Jackson's
second Inaugural. A more literate alternative was provided by Horace Greeley's New York Tribune,
which included a weekly edition with 200,000 subscribers. With such papers, the American press
began to produce more newspapers per capita than any other country—three million more than Britain
(Hall, “Uses” 44, Emery 150).
Literature also began circulating on a massive scale through popular anthologies of fables,
speeches, and poems such as the McGuffey Eclectic Readers, which sold a reputed 122,000,000 copies
within a century of their first publication in 1836. Such texts made schools and colleges into national
markets before they became state systems: forty-one American grammars appeared in the second
decade of the century, eighty-four in the third, and the expanding market accommodated another sixtythree in the 1840s, and yet another sixty-six in the 1850s (Lyman 80). As Carr, Carr, and Schultz have
detailed, textbooks were instrumental in making schools “more inclusive, stratified, and systematic”
(4). Gradated schooling expanded and consolidated the culture of literacy, with the number of
academies and other secondary schools more than doubling from 1840 to 1860—from 3200 to 6700
(C. Burke 37). The stratification of the educational market was part of the development of a more
centralized print economy. The “golden age of local publishing” ended around 1840 as press runs
increased with better capitalization (Hall, “Uses” 40). The manufacture of books began to be
dominated by companies like Harper's that had the steam presses and railroad distribution networks to
market to the nation’s schools. Print became dominated by large corporations who marketed textbooks
and self-improvement literature, including conduct manuals, elocutionary readers, letter-writing
handbooks, and educational novels.
The proliferation of print increased the need to teach the literate to read with discernment.
Five times more books were published in the thirties and forties than had been appeared in the
previous sixty years (Kaestle et al. 54). According to Cmiel, “the diffusion of basic linguistic skills
condemned all coherent efforts to exclude people of ‘middling culture’ from public debate” (15). If
they could not be excluded, at least they could be taught to behave. As the reading public expanded
beyond the realm of devotional literature to include dime store novels and cheap magazine fiction, the
didactic purposes of literature gained broader importance as a means to preach the virtues of personal
restraint and social refinement. This ethos has been characterized as "an emerging civil religion—the
American version of Victorianism" (Hall “Uses” 44). Belletristic literature helped to distinguish the
modes of dress and expression that enabled readers to identify themselves with literate tastes (see
Zboray). Literary forms were comparatively open to interpretation and appropriation because, as
Davidson has discussed, popular fictions were not yet scripted by generic proscriptions. By modern
measures, literary genres were not yet clearly distinguished . As Jane Tompkins has discussed, “the
aesthetic and the didactic, the serious and the sentimental were not opposed but overlapping
designations” (Sensational 17). As reading became common, aspiring readers had to be taught to show
more discerning tastes. A didactic concern for taste and style came to distinguish belletristic from
oratorical conceptions of literature. As I discussed in the first volume of this history of college English
studies, abundance prompted the refinement of consumption as a means to distinction, as elaborated in
the literature of self-improvement (see Formation). Unlike in Britain, however, the educated classes
could not assume that displays of refinement would evoke deference because Americans were often
indifferent, and even openly hostile, to aristocratic pretensions.
Cmiel's Democratic Eloquence examines how modes of public address were inflected with
popular idioms as republicans vied for support with popular speakers in penny papers, tent revivals,
stump speeches, and lyceum lectures (see also Antczak; Clark and Halloran; and Eldred and
Mortensen). Speakers and writers ranging from Horace Greeley and Henry Ward Beecher to Abraham
Lincoln adopted a plain style that shifted from folk wisdom and dialect humor to euphemistic prudery
and "high falutin'" language, sometimes to show deference but often to mock refinement (Cmiel 63-6).
56
From his years as a popular lecturer, Emerson noted that "every one has felt how superior in force is
the language of the street to that of the academy" ("Eloquence" 8: 124). Such perceptions undermined
the authority of the neoclassical style that the educated had used to speak for the public. An orator
took on a different sort of representative authority when speaking in the “language of the street.” This
conversational style opened up possibilities for women and others who did fit the classical image of
the “good man speaking well,” but could speak from the heartfelt experience of a common person.
The blurred boundaries of the expanding literate culture prompted a "literacy campaign. . . that
permeated virtually every dimension of American culture" (Stevens 99). That campaign had several
fronts. Massachusetts established a State Board of Education with Horace Mann as its Secretary in
1837. The first compulsory school attendance law was passed there in 1852. At the same time, efforts
were also made to limit the spread of literacy to enslaved African Americans. After the Nat Turner
Rebellion of 1831, several southern states made it a crime to teach slaves or even freed African
Americans. Despite such restrictions, increasing numbers of African Americans were able to gain
access to literacy, print, and literary societies (see Bacon and McClish; Royster). Yet another literacy
campaign was fought by those who attempted to strengthen the boundaries between the merely literate
and the truly learned. Traditional intellectuals at Yale and elsewhere responded to the expanding
access to education by insisting upon ancient languages as a prerequisite for access to the learned
culture. Such reactions were largely a rearguard attempt to defend a receding literary tradition. Only
elite institutions could presume students had a Latin grammar school education. More diverse
programs of study were offered by more accessible types of secondary schools—academies and the
gradated high schools that began to emerge at mid century. Many high schools stressed English studies
before colleges did. The popularization of literature and the expansion and stratification of public
education established the institutional foundation and the ideological justification for the growth of
college English studies, as I will discuss after I review the spread of state-mandated schooling.
Schooling the Public in “Republican Institutions of Self-Government”
According to John Dewey, Horace Mann is “the patron saint of progressive education”
because he promoted schools “as republican institutions of self-government” (Later Works 2:181).
Dewey aptly characterized the transitional role of Mann’s generation of reformers, who preached the
republican virtues of public education in order to justify their efforts to establish the institutional
apparatus of professionally administered school systems. Mann and his collaborators established state
mandates, governing boards, teachers' institutes, and professional associations. Infused with an
evangelical faith that a prosperous republic depended upon a productive citizenry, Mann and his
contemporaries established the professional justifications and institutional apparatus of well
administered schooling. Characterizing teaching as a "classless profession" made poor working
conditions into opportunities for self-sacrifice (see Mattingly). Such selfless devotion was seen to be
well suited to women, as Robbins has discussed in Managing Literacy, Mothering America. The
entrance of large numbers of women into education was justified by invoking the virtues of
“republican motherhood,” which is yet another example of how republican doctrines were used to
constitute professionally administered systems of representative “self-government” (see Kerber,
“Daughters of Columbia”). While the conjunction of schooling and literacy is second nature to us
today, literacy was traditionally acquired as part of one’s natural upbringing in families, churches, and
ungraded schools that often had a domestic feel and a religious purpose. The status of teaching was
still shaped by the tradition of dame schools and the involvement of preachers as teachers, but those
traditions receded as teaching became subjected to professional administration. Efforts were made to
professionalize teaching, but then as now, teaching was low status work for college graduates. While
normal schools began to be established in the 1830s, teachers' institutes and lyceum lectures were the
principal vehicles for training teachers, especially primary school teachers, who were mostly female.
The institution that was perhaps most central to these informal educational networks was the
lyceum. Within two decades of the emergence of the first lyceum in 1826, over 4000 towns had
become integrated into lyceum networks that included festive entertainments along with literary
lecturers, who toured the provinces to supplement their income, often from writing and teaching.
Overlapping associative networks were used by suffragists and abolitionists. These networks worked
in tandem with the periodical literature of the time to expand the literate culture. Emerson was one of
57
the best-known lecturers in lyceums, which he characterized as "the new pulpit" after he quit
preaching and began touring the country to lecture (qtd. in Kuklick 81). Three-quarters of Emerson's
essays were first delivered as lectures according to Zboray. Lyceums and mutual education groups
enabled teachers to publicize their learning and network with touring scholars and writers. Mutual
education groups such as literary societies were often aligned with the teachers' institutes that were
helping to give teaching a semblance of professionalism. In the weeks between terms, teachers'
institutes functioned as a virtual "revival agency" to keep up teachers' zeal for their mission (Mattingly
61). Isolated female teachers looked to such opportunities to validate their experience by connecting
with others who shared in their work, much as academic conferences and summer seminars would be
vital to the professional development of later generations of teachers. Lyceums and philosophical
societies also provided opportunities for scientists to gain public recognition by giving experimental
demonstrations. According to Reingold's meta-analysis of previous research studies, about twenty-five
percent of all college faculty were involved in such activities in the antebellum period (61, 57). This
statistic belies the traditional depiction of antebellum faculty as half-educated antiquarians who were
not involved in research.
These informal cultural networks played a vital role in providing women with access to more
advanced education, first in academies and then in normal schools. Some of the first women’s
academies to offer more advanced instruction were Emma Willard’s Troy Seminary (1821), Catherine
Beecher's Harford Seminary (1828), and Mary Lyon's Mount Holyoke Seminary (1837).47 While some
four hundred female academies were founded between 1790 and 1830, many other academies were
"promiscuous" institutions that taught both girls and boys, often with scholarships to prepare teachers
and preachers. A few of the thousands of academies that were operating at mid century evolved into
colleges, but most became high schools (Sizer 40). The consolidation of state administered schools
marginalized many of the academies that had opened up access to higher education. Private teacher
academies were founded in Vermont in 1823 and in Massachusetts in 1827, and in 1834 state funding
was given to teacher academies in New York. These private institutions were condemned by Mann
and other professional administrators intent on developing integrated state systems (Reese 34; also
Borchers and Wagner 282-83). The first state normal school was founded in Massachusetts in 1838.
Like academies, normal schools were “people’s colleges” (Herbst And Sadly Teach 81). Many
students did not really plan to become teachers but turned to normal schools because they were
accessible to working people and women. Many could only afford to attend for short periods. In fact
often only about a third of the students from one term stayed on for the next, though some did stay on
for more advanced studies in rhetoric, literature, history, and natural and moral philosophy (see
Beadie). Academies, teacher institutes, and normal schools made it possible for large numbers of
women to get into education: in Massachusetts, over half of teachers were women in the 1830s, rising
to two thirds in the 1850s, and three quarters in the 1860s. By that point, a majority of teachers across
the country were women (Ogren 12). As a result of their expanded involvement in education, the
literacy rates of women rose to equal those of men for the first time in history. These increases in
women’s education and literacy were fundamental to their involvement in the abolitionist and
suffragist movements (see Schwager).
The feminization of teaching was integral to the professionalization of school administration
in the latter half of the century, when evangelical reformers such as Horace Mann and Henry Barnard
were succeeded by a generation of professionally credentialed administrators who are described in
47
These academies emphasized English studies. For example, the stated mission of Mount Holyoke was
to prepare “female teachers” and “qualify ladies for other spheres of usefulness” by providing “a solid,
extensive, and well-balanced English education, connected with that general improvement, that moral culture,
and those enlarged views of duty, which will prepare ladies to be educators of children and youth, rather than to
fit them to be mere teachers as the term has been technically applied" (qtd. Smallwood 88-9). For a study of how
seminaries for teachers both opened up and limited education for women, see Ricks. Most women in college in
the latter half of the century attended normal schools. Harmon provides a case study of the largest of those,
Illinois State Normal University (founded 1857), which educated over twenty-four thousand teachers by the end
of the century (over half of them women), though only seven percent stayed long enough to graduate. Another
case study is provided by Miheusuah's analysis of the Cherokee Female Seminary at Park Hill, Indian Territory,
which was modeled on Mt. Holyoke.
58
detail by Mattingly. Schools became integrated systems that instituted a gradated model of human
development with norms for each age, discipline, and class. High schools became leading institutions,
sometimes by identifying teachers as "Professors" and generally by hiring fewer women, who were
paid as little as a third of men's salaries (Reese 120-30). Henry Barnard was a major promoter of high
schools, both as editor of the American Journal of Education and then as the head of the first federal
Bureau of Education. Centralized school systems also offered increasing numbers of professional
administrative positions. As a result, better-educated educators ceased moving into the private sector
to become independent entrepreneurs with their own schools. Credentialed educators began to invest
their expertise in state institutions sanctioned by professional journals and organizations. As schooling
expanded, literacy rose, and the two became integrally related (see Harvey Graff). In the census of
1840, 96.01 percent of adult white males identified themselves as literate, and for the first time most
white children under ten were in school.48 Schooling worked to instill the virtues of the print culture,
and printers and publishers reciprocated by promoting the benefits of public education. As Stevens
discusses, local newspapers often played vital roles in efforts to create and expand school systems, not
simply because more students meant more readers but also because alliances of schools and
newspapers strengthened their respective standing as representative institutions (114-15).
Common schools established the institutional foundations for college English studies by
disseminating "a watered-down version” of the literary culture through elocutionary manuals and
readers that instilled an oratorical sense of reading that treated reading with feeling as a performance
in sensibility (Kaestle et al. 59-62). As already noted, the best known were the McGuffey's Eclectic
Readers, with students moving from the First through Fifth Readers in a sequence of instruction that
included a Hamlet soliloquy alongside a "Dissertation on Roast Pig."49 To teach advanced reading
skills, the Fifth Reader begins with thirty pages discussing inflections, accents, and "poetic pauses." In
such elocutionary treatments, reading became "a rhetorical exercise" concerned with conveying "to the
hearer, fully and clearly the ideas and feelings of the writer" (McGuffey 21). Such anthologies taught
students to invest literature with personal feeling by performing a reading that demonstrated
appropriate sensibility. To instill tasteful self-restraint, elocutionary manuals included notation
systems to script appropriate modes of self-expression (see Miller Formation). The elaboration of
textbook genres is one of the best examples of the reciprocal relations between the expansion of public
schooling and the diversification and stratification of literate society, as I will discuss in a later section.
Reports from such schools suggest that many teachers had too little training, too few books,
and too many unprepared students to do more than rely on class recitations. The stifling effects of the
traditional reliance on rote mastery are perhaps nowhere more apparent than in the use of grammars to
teach reading and writing through the memorization of elaborate systems of rules. Lindley Murray's
Grammar was a standard source in colleges and academies. After it was published in England in 1795,
the text passed through more than forty American editions in just over a decade, and it was reprinted
more than six hundred times throughout the English-speaking world from Canada to Calcutta. Along
with Webster and a host of others, Murray codified the proscriptions that would become the bane of
English professors and teachers, including the logical absurdity that two negatives equal a positive and
the elaborate distinction between shall and will.50 Whenever prevailing conventions are formalized
48
Such self-reports were undoubtedly skewed by the desire to appear literate. Other benchmarks are
provided by signature rates, with 42% of Army enlistees unable to sign their names in 1800, dropping to 25% in
1850 and just 7% in 1895. This sample is biased downward and can be contrasted with signatures on wills,
which represent a more select group. From a meta-analysis of several samples of wills from 1800, Stevens found
between 70% and 90% percent able to sign (101).
49
After graduating from Washington College in 1826, William Holmes McGuffey served as president of
Cincinnati College and Ohio University, and at this death in 1845, he was chair of mental and moral philosophy
at the University of Virginia.
50
Propounded in terms that are meaningless to students, such distinctions as these have served to instill
anxieties about correctness that have made generations of composition students into non-writers:
Will, in the first person, singular and plural, intimates resolution and promising; in the second and third
person, only foretells; as "I will reward the good and will punish the wicked:" We will remember
benefits, and be grateful." "Thou wilt, or he will, repeat that folly;" "You or they will have a pleasant
walk"
59
into elaborate codes to be recited by rote, students are taught to concentrate on the mastery of mindnumbing minutiae and are thereby distracted from learning how to speak and write with power. This
conservative approach to systems of expertise worked to restrict access to the powerful potentials that
opened up with cheap print literacy.
While elaborate codifications of polite proprieties served as a barrier to the educational
advancement of the less literate, such studies helped to spread a liberal understanding of the educated
culture among better classes of students by replacing a tacit deference to genteel conventions with a
linguistic methodology for systematically categorizing different classes of usage, and users. For those
who made it through the rudiments of literacy, "verbal criticism" was taught from the canons of usage
that had been formulated by George Campbell: the language of the educated (like the educated
themselves) was that which was deemed to be national, reputable, and current, as opposed to those
conventions confined to the provinces, the illiterate, and the antiquarian. Campbell's Philosophy of
Rhetoric combined moralistic pieties with an empirical methodology that formalized the grammatical,
rhetorical, and logical conventions of literacy according to the “science of human nature” (see
Formation). The widespread adoption of his methods for assessing usage helped to move linguistic
studies away from speculations about original languages and universal grammars toward more
systematic descriptions of linguistic conventions. This movement was facilitated by the practical
appeal of the methods of scientism, which represented logical inquiry not as a deduction from received
beliefs but as a generalization from observations of the individual experience. This methodology
legitimized the aspirations of the middle classes by disrupting the tacit transmission of traditional
deferences and instilling a middle-class faith in the progress of reason.
Of course it is difficult to assess how teachers actually taught these texts, and harder still to
know what students made of them. Creative teachers did adopt more dialogical forms of pedagogy, in
some cases turning to the lyceum as a model (see Borchers and Wagner 286-89). From extensive
analyses of "first books" of composition, Schultz argues that more interactive pedagogies first
emerged not in colleges but in common schools as more progressive teachers recognized how useless
most grammars were and began to have students learn to write by writing. While belletristic
assumptions prevailed in colleges, Schultz argues that experiential pedagogies contributed to a
"democratization of writing" that began "composition instruction, as we understand it today" (4).
Rather than reciting half-understood rules, students wrote from observations of familiar objects and
experiences using textbooks such as Elizabeth Mayo's Lessons on Common Things, which was edited
by John Frost.51 Frost studied with Channing at Harvard and served as a "Professor of Belles Lettres"
at Philadelphia Central School before devoting himself to publishing more than three hundred
textbooks. "Object" textbooks treated learning as something more than memorizing rules. Instead of a
stifling emphasis on errors, teachers were advised to have students free-write in journals, peer
response groups, and portfolios. Drawing upon institutional records, teachers' publications, and
students' compositions, Schultz identifies such textbooks with a broad-based "reform tradition" that is
best known in innovative schools such as Bronson Alcott's Temple School (founded in 1834) that
stressed introspection, observation, and collaboration, as described in Elizabeth Palmer Peabody's
Record of a School (Schultz 36, 49; see also Warren). Experiential pedagogies were also advocated by
some normal schools later in the century (see Borchers and Wagner).
These pedagogical innovations was responsive to the experiences of the increasing numbers of
women, working people, and African Americans who began to look to education as a means to earn an
independent living. The careers of the best known followed a pattern that moved from teaching to
writing and touring on the lecture circuit. Such was the case with Margaret Fuller, who taught
Shall, on the contrary, in the first person, simply foretells; in the second and third persons, promises,
commands, or threatens: as "I shall go abroad;" "We shall dine at home;" "Thou shalt, or you shall,
inherit the land;" "Ye shall do justice, and love mercy:" "They shall account for their misconduct."
(Murray 90).
51
Schultz contrasts these textbooks with the better known works that established composition as a
mainstay of secondary education, including Green Parker's Progressive Exercises (1832, with 33 imprints within
a half century). The forerunner of these textbooks was John Walker's Teacher's Assistant in English
Composition; or Easy Rules for Writing Themes and Composing Exercises on Subjects Proper for the
Improvement of Youth of Both Sexes at School (1801, with the first American edition in 1808).
60
composition, literature, and rhetoric in a secondary school for men and women before becoming a
community educator associated with Emerson and the Transcendentalists. Fuller wrote one of the most
noted feminists work of the era, Women in the Nineteenth Century, as well as essays for periodicals
ranging from Greeley's New York Tribune to the Transcendentalists' Dial magazine. She also
conducted literary societies informed by a feminist pedagogy that helped women overcome their
limited access to education by engaging in critical discussions of their own social conditions (see
Kolodny and Warren).52 As Rouse discusses, Fuller appropriated republican doctrines to advance
feminist purposes. Figures such as Fuller call for more research on how the entrance of women into
teaching drew upon contested ideologies such as republican motherhood to advance collectivist
responses to the rising professionalism of male administrators (see MacDonald). These communitybased intellectuals provide an alternative point of reference for assessing how republican doctrines
were translated into professionalized modes of expertise. Unlike professional administrators and other
experts, teachers, writers, and lecturers such as Fuller had a civic engagement with the communities
that they represented. Women, minorities, and workers generally relied less on professional expertise
than on generalist vehicles of representation such as magazine literature because such groups had
limited access to the educational credentialing needed to gain professional standing.
Defining teaching as women’s work helped to justify elite colleges’ efforts to distance
themselves from the rest of public education. "Liberal arts purists," according to Borrowman, refused
to get involved with preparing teachers, and their refusal helped to make teacher preparation a
marginal concern of higher education. For their part, educationalists such Mann resisted the tendency
of normal schools to expand into liberal arts institutions as they attempted to move up in the higher
educational market. Mann and other reformers saw the liberal arts as a distraction from teaching the
rudiments to instill character in teachers, as in students (Borrowman 45). Teacher “training” thus
failed to develop the intellectual and institutional engagements that might have helped teachers to
improve their professional status, and thereby professionalize the institutional base of our field of
cultural production. These trends can be traced back to how the liberal arts were set in opposition to
professionalization, most obviously in the back to basics campaign launched by classicists at Yale, but
also more generally in efforts such as Mann’s that sought to professionalize schooling. More
accessible institutions had the power to serve as broadly representative institutions, and that power
differs from the influence exercised by more exclusive colleges. The power to provide access works
differently from the power to deny access, insofar as the former is expansive, while the latter is
essentially conservative. Emerging colleges, academies, and normal schools gained influence by
distributing education within their communities, while elite colleges preserved their standing by
limiting access to upper-class groups who would better represent their alma mater. This distinction in
the political economy of higher education tends to be overlooked because broadly based institutions
have historically sought to improve their standing by emulating more exclusive colleges, and as a
result, such institutions have tended to undercut their own powerbase.
The Political Economy of the Liberal Arts
One of the most influential historians of American education, Richard Hofstadter, has
characterized the antebellum era as "the great retrogression" that resulted from the dispersal of
enlightened innovations into too many poorly funded institutions with ill-prepared students,
unscholarly faculty, regressive curricula, and sectarian administrators more concerned with piety than
progress. Hofstadter maintained that financial support for higher education was too broadly disbursed,
as evident in the fact that as many as three-quarters of antebellum colleges were unable to attract the
support needed to survive. This failure is commonly cited to substantiate the view that colleges offered
an antiquarian curriculum that was out of step with the needs of the time. Drawing on these
conclusions, histories of college English tend to dismiss antebellum colleges and begin in earnest with
the emergence of specialized scholarship in research universities.53 Unfortunately, these conclusions
52
Two richly complementary accounts of what antebellum women made of their reading and writing are
provided by Kelley’s “Reading Women/Women Reading” and Eldred and Mortensen’s Imagining Rhetoric:
Composing Women of the Early United States.
53
The historians of the discipline whom I have on other points found quite incisive have depicted
antebellum colleges as outmoded and elitist. Russell has sweepingly concluded that before 1850 "almost all post-
61
are in some respects wrong and in others misdirected. Detailed research on the varied institutions of
the period demonstrates that students came from diverse social backgrounds, and that the rate of
successful college founding was higher than in any other era in American history.54 These facts
challenge us to expand our history to include the developments in literacy and education that I have
discussed in previous sections. The diversification and stratification of literacy and education set out
the institutional and ideological space for the rise of the “profession of literature,” as Graff has termed
it, but a reassessment of the antebellum period underlines how this disciplinary specialization worked
to undercut the vital engagements of literacy studies with broader developments in literacy.
According to Burke, antebellum colleges tended to be "multi-level, multi-purpose institutions
that compensated for the absence of a democratic and efficient primary and secondary education
system in the rural and less economically affluent areas of the country" (5). Most colleges were local
institutions of twenty to eighty students with a handful of faculty and tutors, making specialized
instruction all but impossible. As Burke discusses, competition among New England colleges
intensified as the number of colleges in the region increased faster than the population, resulting in the
saturation of traditional markets for college graduates. Such factors need to be carefully assessed if we
are to understand the socioeconomic forces at work in the reforms that shaped political economy of the
liberal arts in the early national period. The criticisms of antebellum colleges by reformers such as
President Francis Wayland of Brown University have often been taken as accurate assessments of the
antiquarianism of colleges. However, such accounts do not explain why more vocational institutions in
New England also suffered declines in enrollment in the second quarter of the nineteenth century, or
why more traditionalist colleges did not experience comparatively deeper declines.
Rather than assuming that there was a pent up demand for professional expertise, we need to
examine the political economy of the liberal arts against the professionalization of broader sectors of
society that I sketched out in the last section. According to Burke, antebellum colleges provided
"social mobility" unsurpassed until after World War II (96). Poorer students tended to be older, having
worked, generally as teachers, to pay for college, which cost about one third of a "skilled manual
laborer's income" in 1800, rising to about sixty percent of such an income in 1860—a proportion that
is equal to the costs of many colleges today (Burke 50). The percentage of white males in college
barely surpassed one percent before the Civil War, with no more than 4% in all of higher education at
the end of the century (including normal and technical schools). In both periods those percentages
roughly parallel the percentage of the population entering the professions: 1.58% in 1860 and 4.5% in
1900 (including ministers, physicians, and lawyers as well as editors and professors). This fact
suggests that enrollments were correlated with the professionalization of middle-class work, as I will
discuss further in the next chapter. Before costs increased and denominational support systems
declined in the middle of the century, "pauper scholars" were common in even the most elite college in
America, though Harvard systematically reduced access in the second quarter of the century by
increasing costs to twice that of other New England colleges. Admission requirements were also raised
to levels accessible only to students from the preparatory schools it helped finance and staff.55 While
elementary schools were unapologetically elitist and sectarian" (35). According to Ohmann, antebellum colleges
were "little more than sectarian academies" that maintained the "traditional class structure" by perpetuating an
"aristocratic tradition" (English 282). On this and other points, such analyses depend upon the assumption that
faculty and students came from the upper-classes. This assumption is not born out by research on the period,
calling into question basic assumptions about how antebellum colleges worked, and whom they worked for.
54
Hofstadter maintained that because resources had been spread too broadly, most antebellum colleges
failed, as documented by Tewksbury’s finding of an 80% failure rate among the over 700 colleges chartered
before the Civil War. Burke found that Tewksbury erred in assuming that all the colleges that were chartered
actually opened. Burke also researched the diverse social backgrounds of a random sample of over twelve
thousand college graduates and two thousand students in professional schools in the first half of the nineteenth
century. Burk’s research documents antebellum colleges expanded access, with the greatest growth in underserved regions and expanded access for rural, poor, and female students (19).
55
Allmendinger's research on New England colleges complements Burke's national study. According to
Allmendinger, common schools brought a "flood of students from poor families" into colleges. At Amherst, for
example, 500 of 1300 students from 1821 to 1845 relied on charity funds intended to prepare ministers (65).
Allmendinger estimates that one-quarter of New England college students relied on charity scholarships or work,
while Herbst estimates that about one third of all New England college students took leaves each year to teach
62
historians have generally assumed that state-controlled institutions opened up access to education, the
most prestigious tended to be unresponsive to lower-class students interested in teaching.
Into the 1820s, a student could be admitted to even elite institutions with as little as a year of
classical languages (Story 77). Classical languages dominated the first year of the curriculum, but such
studies were often rudimentary. It is hard to assess how much classical literature was actually taught in
translation.56 In the second quarter of the century, elite institutions began to raise admissions and
levels of study. Grading became more common, and efforts were made to refuse graduation to students
who failed to meet grade requirements. This concern for standards seems to have been a response to
the diversification of the student population (Smallwood 77, 92-95). According to Allmendinger, "the
invasion of the poor shattered the order, and uniformity, if not the content, of the classical curriculum"
(67). Instead of trying to perpetuate traditional standards of learning, more broadly accessible colleges
responded to their students' lack of preparation by shifting modes of instruction. Alternative curricula
emphasizing English and science were instituted in the 1820s at Union, Dartmouth, and Amherst
colleges and at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute. Institutions such as Butler University (founded 1845)
that opened up access to women and minorities often replaced the study of the ancients with "a critical
and thorough study of the English language," in part because their students had not studied in grammar
schools (qtd. in Weidner 252).
As more broadly accessible institutions began to shift literacy studies from a classical to a
modern footing, Yale reacted by attempting to strengthen Latin requirements. After political leaders at
commencement and in the legislature called for deemphasizing ancient languages, the lay members of
the Yale Corporation formed a committee to consider eliminating "the study of dead languages"
(Reports on the Course of Instruction 3). That proposal was soundly rejected by the faculty committee
headed by President Day. According to the Yale Report of 1828, "the present state of literature"
required an emphasis on the ancients in order to sustain the fundamental distinction between “liberal”
and “professional” education (Reports 32). At this same time Oxford and Cambridge were defending
classicism against the expansion of the curriculum at such institutions as the University of London, as
I discussed in the first volume of this history of college English studies. The Yale Report upheld
classical languages and mathematics as the best means to discipline students and limit the
encroachment of the "mercantile, mechanical, or agricultural" arts (16-17). 57 The Report disdainfully
dismisses the "commercial high schools, gymnasia, lycea, agricultural seminaries," and academies that
were opening up higher education to the public. A classically grounded liberal arts education was seen
to be necessary to limit access; otherwise, the value of a college degree would be undercut, just as a
"merchant who deals in a single class of commodities" would have to reduce prices to compete with
lower-class products (Reports 26).
(And Sadly Teach 22). In 1823, Harvard President Ticknor complained about "the poverty of [the] many
students, who keep school" (rptd. Hofstadter and Smith 1:271). However, by 1831 only 34 Harvard students
were still on financial aid as a result of increases in costs and admissions requirements (Story 76).
56
In my studies of the records of antebellum students from Harvard, Yale, Princeton, Brown, and the
University of Pennsylvania, I have found almost all of the notes and compositions to be in English. For example,
of some seven hundred and fifty pages left by William Gardiner (Harvard graduate of 1816), no more than ten
pages are in Latin. Though almost two hundred pages are on ancient Greek history and literature, the writings are
confined to responding to translations, not translating the texts themselves. The only Greek in the two dozen
writings on Greek literature is a quote on a title page or a concluding line. On the other hand, Gardiner’s
notebooks include extensive work with English composition and literature, including several dozen themes, two
dozen forensic disputations, and an essay of over forty pages on English and American literature. Some of these
compositions are accompanied by rough drafts with brief written comments in another hand.
57
A sense of what that discipline is provided by Julian Sturtevant’s reflections on his studies at Yale.
According to Sturtevant, Yale’s "power lay in its fixed and rigidly prescribed curriculum, and in its thorough
drill." Sturtevant (who was president of Illinois College from 1844 to 1876) recounted being taught by graduate
tutors who were "excellent drill-masters," though "they could hardly be said to teach at all." Remembering one
of his few lessons with a professor, Sturtevant recounted how a co-author of the Yale Report (James Kingsley)
dismissed students’ translations by noting "young gentlemen, you read Latin horribly and translate it worse.
Kingsley reportedly stated "young gentlemen, you have been reading one of the noblest productions of the
human mind without knowing it." Sturtevant ironically added that students "might justly have retorted. . . 'whose
fault is it'?" given how rarely they saw faculty in the classroom (rptd. Hofstatder and Smith 1:275).
63
This attempt to use classical literature to stratify the educational market was part of a general
effort to buttress the neoclassical authority of more conservative elements in the literate classes.58 A
less reactionary response to the populist politics of the era involved translating republican values into
professionalized systems of control, as I discussed earlier in this chapter. That approach was
eventually adopted at Harvard, but it took two generations to overcome the resistance of the faculty.
An attempt to diversify the curriculum was first made by the President George Ticknor. Ticknor was
Smith Professor of the French and Spanish Languages and Literature and Professor of Belles Lettres at
Harvard from 1817 to 1835. Ticknor corresponded with Jefferson about their parallel efforts to
implement the "elective system." Ticknor drew on his own experience as part of the first generation to
study in Germany and supported his proposals by citing such Scottish reformers as George Jardine.
Ticknor wanted to organize faculty into departments in order to encourage them to publish. Students
would be grouped by ability levels, with some allowed to bypass classical language studies, though all
would be required to take regular exams in lecture courses based on professors' research. Reforms of
general education would make Harvard into "a thorough and well-disciplined high school" to prepare
students for more advanced "professional studies" (rptd. Hofstadter and Smith 1:271-3, 265-66).
Ticknor sought to open up access to prosperous managers of "manufacturing establishments" and
spread "liberal education" to "all classes of the community" in order to undercut the support for the
colleges that continued to "spring up" (rptd. Crane 79-82). These arguments did not apparently
convince the faculty, for the proposed reforms were only implemented in his own course in “Literary
History” and in his own department of "Grammar, Rhetorick and Oratory." Ticknor finally resigned
after fifteen years of unsuccessfully promoting his plans.
Another noted failure that highlights how diversification and stratification were starting to
reshape the political economy of higher education is Thomas Jefferson’s unsuccessful effort to
establish a comprehensive educational system in Virginia. Almost forty years after his first proposal,
Jefferson succeeded in establishing the University of Virginia in 1824 upon the same principles that
Ticknor attempted to implement at Harvard. Several other state universities had already been founded
in the south—at Georgia in 1785, North Carolina in 1794, Tennessee in 1794, and South Carolina in
1801. Drawing on the same republican assumptions as Rush, Jefferson sought to establish a state
educational system that culminated with a research university. This gradated system was to provide
three years of free schooling that would function to sort “the learned” from "the laboring.” The most
promising would rise into the "learned professions" along with "the wealthy" by completing programs
of study that culminated with the "General" and "Professional Schools" of the state university (rptd
Crane 39).59 Like Rush, Jefferson envisioned an educational system that functioned as a meritocracy
that would channel students into professional hierarchies by sorting out the most capable from the
lower orders to rise through classes with the wealthy. In Jefferson’s proposals as in the other reforms
discussed in this section, the liberal arts became equated with a general education intended to prepare
students for more professional studies. This emerging hierarchy was what the back to basics campaign
at Yale was attempting to resist by using classical languages to preserve the exclusiveness of liberal
arts institutions, while Jefferson and Ticknor attempted to capitalize on the power of expanding access
to broader audiences, and thereby channel their aspirations into the educated culture.
The sort of reforms that were attempted at Harvard and Virginia were more fully implemented
at Brown University, though the results were also uneven. Brown is an interesting case in point
because it was founded upon an oratorical conception of literature, and its President, Francis Wayland,
was a leading political economist. The college took its name from a donor who gave five thousand
dollars to set up a professorship of "Oratory and Belles Letters." While teaching the rising generation
58
The Yale Report can be read as part of the reactionary responses to the populist politics of the
Jacksonian period, as discussed in Kerber’s chapter on "Salvaging the Classical Tradition" in Federalists in
Dissent. To explain their loss of power to Democratic-Republicans, conservative republicans looked to the
Augustan eras of Rome and Britain for models of the disintegration of democracy into demagoguery.
59
The creation of the University of Michigan paralleled Jefferson's unsuccessful efforts to create a state
educational system in Virginia. In New York and then Michigan, Henry Tappan attempted to create a state
system of education culminating in a research university. As Bender discusses, Tappan's University Education
(1851) positioned universities as the cosmopolitan centers of the antebellum networks of literary societies,
schooling systems, and lyceums that I discussed in previous sections.
64
to speak with eloquence appealed to public benefactors in the revolutionary era, Wayland recognized
that the public appeal of higher education was changing with the proliferation of literate expertise. He
calculatedly set out to increase Brown's market share by making college studies more attractive to the
middle-class students who were attending academies. In his Report to the Corporation of Brown
University in 1850 and in other frequently cited reform proposals such as Thoughts on the Present
Collegiate System, Wayland embraced the socioeconomic trends that were condemned by the Yale
Report. Wayland concluded that colleges were outmoded and under-marketed. Colleges should
become "popular" institutions that prepared students for the "business” of life. Rather than English
universities that only served the "aristocracy," he looked to Scottish sources, as Rush, Franklin, and
Jefferson had before him (rptd. Crane 145). Wayland called on colleges to meet "the demand for
general education" by offering "scientific and literary instruction to every class of person," especially
those in "the productive professions" (rptd. Crane 143). Any student who could pay had a "right" to a
college education, according to Wayland. To raise revenues to pay professional salaries, colleges
should develop varied programs offered at convenient times on flexible schedules. If the classics could
not compete, "then let them give place to something better" suited to the needs of "merchants,
manufacturers, and every class of citizens" (rptd. Crane 146, 114).
Reasoning from an analysis quite similar to the Yale Report, Wayland sought to position
Brown quite differently in the market for professional expertise. He agreed that tuition, like the cost of
any product, is determined by prevailing prices and the costs of production. However, he maintained
that the way to raise revenues was to expand product lines, not to preserve an elite market niche, as the
Yale Report had tried to do. To accomplish this purpose, Wayland created the most noted innovations
of the first half of the nineteenth century. He hired star scholars and established flexible programs in
science, engineering, and agriculture. He created extension courses that were predecessors to night
school and distance education programs. All departments, including "English Language and Rhetoric,"
had to develop majors and general education courses. Belletristic courses in "poetry & eloquence"
would serve to instill "moral emotions" by impressing students with the "moral sentiments" of classics
such as Milton and Shakespeare (rptd. Crane). While these innovations foreshadow later trends,
Wayland's reforms failed to attract the promised enrollments, and the students who did enroll failed to
meet faculty expectations (see Burke 69). In fact, enrollments increased less at Brown in the decade
after Wayland instituted his noted reforms than at Yale in the decade after the Yale Report! Such facts
suggest that there was not a pent-up demand for professional expertise, as has been assumed by
criticisms of antebellum colleges. Rather than responding to demand, higher education would become
instrumental in organizing markets for professional expertise as public education and the public sphere
became more fully elaborated in the ways that Ticknor, Jefferson, and Wayland had attempted.
At Harvard in 1841 President John Quincy established a model that mediated between the
Yale and Brown responses to emerging trends in the political economy of higher education. Quincy
upheld the liberal arts as suited to the traditional elite and expanded general education to meet the
needs of students with broader professional ambitions. He estimated that classical languages took up
one third of a program of studies comprised of "Mathematics, the Ancient Languages, History, Natural
History, Chemistry, the Modern Languages, Philosophy, Physics, Theology, English Themes,
Declamations, Forensics" ("Remarks" 24). Quincy maintained that the classics had been appropriate
for those traditionally served by higher education—the small but “learned” class who valued the
ancient languages as "the only vital element of a liberal education.” However, a traditional literary
education was less suited to the "larger, less generally learned, but intelligent, influential, popular, and
wealthy" classes who did not value "classical literature" but wanted to have the "distinction" of a
"liberal education" (12). Banking on the identification of literary studies with the upper classes,
Quincy implemented specialized programs of study to prepare graduates to take charge of various
domains of experience in the ways that Rush had imagined a half century before. In 1840 the
curriculum was reformed to reduce classical language requirements to the first year, with students able
to substitute other historical, scientific, and linguistic studies thereafter. As one of "the most important
parts of a liberal education," English was required in each year of the curriculum, with a proposed
course on the "History of English Literature" called for to "give completeness to this department" (2).
In these reforms, one can see how English was coming to replace the classics as learning and the
learned expanded along with the diversification and consolidation of the public sphere.
65
Antebellum English professors presided over an extensive general education program of
declamations, debates, and orations. At Brown, as elsewhere, rhetoric had traditionally been a part of
the first two years of instruction, though exercises in oratory and composition also took up much of
students’ time in their last two years of study. The curriculum culminated with the moral philosophy
courses that were beginning to give rise to such social sciences as political economy in this era. Under
Wayland, college catalogues characterized rhetoric as "the most important branch of a University
education," with descriptions of English studies that are far more detailed than any other subject. The
"oratorical culture" of student societies, literary journals, compositions, and public orations has been
discussed in Graff's account of how professionalized literary studies developed out of "the collapse of
the communal literary culture and corresponding estrangement of literature from its earlier function in
polite society, where it had been an essential instrument of socialization" (20). As discussed in the last
chapter, literary societies compensated for the limitations of the curriculum by providing students with
opportunities to debate and write about political and cultural issues.60 Student societies shaped the
origins of modern literary studies in colleges, as is evident in the fact that poetry and fiction were by
far the most commonly checked out books from the student society library at Princeton that
McLachlan studied, totaling almost a third of all students' reading (477). As McLachlan discusses,
when students' collaborative work in literary societies is taken into account, the antebellum
educational experience comes to appear "intellectually solid, rigorous, broad in scope, and surprisingly
well tailored to the character and interests of the individual student" (485, see also Westbrook).
That claim takes on broader significance when one considers the diverse students served by
more accessible colleges. Many of those colleges were affiliated with religious denominations, but that
does not mean that they were necessarily sectarian institutions. One of the colleges founded by the
evangelicals of the Second Great Awakening was established at Oberlin in 1833. Oberlin Collegiate
Institute was founded by the Presbyterian "colonists" who established a town in Oberlin, Ohio. Like
many antebellum colleges, and republican predecessors such as the College of Philadelphia, Oberlin
was a hybrid institution. It was founded to support "the education of ministers and pious school
teachers—secondarily the elevation of female character, and thirdly the education of the common
people with the higher classes, in such a manner as suits the nature of Republican institutions" (qtd. in
Fairchild 35). The institution included a preparatory department and a theological seminary, French
and music schools, a teachers' academy and a commercial academy, and college tracks for women and
men, with the latter distinguished from the former by the inclusion of classical languages and
oratorical exercises. The college was set up on a plan "sufficiently grand. . . to be called a University”
(Fairchild 5). Oberlin offered extensive work-study programs for male and female students, who came
from diverse backgrounds and areas, in part because the institution was widely known for its fervent
abolitionism. African Americans were first admitted when several arrived with a cohort of abolitionist
students who had left a seminary that had tried to proscribe anti-slavery activism, and then a couple of
faculty agreed to join the college only if access to African Americans was established as a formal
policy (Fairchild 20-2). An African-American parent visiting the College in 1840 noted that of the 400
students, fifteen were African American, including three women (see “Negro Higher Education”).
Oberlin tried to maintain traditional conceptions of a separate sphere for women by
proscribing public speaking activities until female students could no longer be silenced (Fletcher
1:290). Connors has argued that the presence of women in rhetoric classes brought an end to the
disputations and oratorical displays that had functioned as ritualized forms of combat to instill the
martial spirit of republicanism. According to Connors, when small colleges such as Oberlin found it
impossible to sustain a program of study in rhetoric and oratory distinct from the "Ladies' Course" in
literature and composition, the former was combined with the latter. The Ladies Courses at Oberlin
was renamed the "Literary Course" in 1875 (Connors 51; see also Mountford). The Oberlin custom of
having the rhetoric professor read award-winning essays by female students at commencement has
been another point of reference in disciplinary histories (Connors 54-57; also Weidner). Women
gained the right to read their own essays at graduation in 1859, and after decades of agitating to be
able to deliver orations along with their male classmates, in 1870 a suffragist student, Harriet Keeler,
60
A.M. Cohen reviews the libraries of thirty-three antebellum colleges of varied sizes and regions. In ten
the literary societies had larger holdings than the college, and in eight the societies' were at least three-quarters
the size of the college's (91-92). On the topics debated in such societies, see David Potter.
66
stunned the audience by delivering her essay as if it were an oration without reading from the page. By
1885, all such oratorical displays were gone from graduation ceremonies except a single valedictory
address. These developments document how reading, writing, and speaking became inflected by new
registers of expression and experience in ways that constituted the institutional practices that made
English literature into an object of formal study, not so much as a response to theories advanced in
elite institutions but as a response to pressures working upward from the diversification of literacy and
the literate. Those pressures have historically converged on the general education courses through
which diverse students enter higher education, and from which college English studies developed as a
scholarly discipline.
The Transition from Rhetoric through Composition to Literature
As education and literacy expanded to classes of students with less access to public forums,
rhetoric and belles lettres courses evolved into introductory composition courses and surveys of
British and American literature. Transitional texts such as Blair’s Lectures on Rhetoric and Belles
Lettres provided a complete course of English study that began with the history of language, reviewed
classical concepts of rhetoric, and offered advice on composition before concluding with a survey of
genres more diverse than those included in a modern sense of literature. As various areas of expertise
became consolidated into representative systems of self-governance in the ways that Rush had
envisioned and the curriculum was beginning to encompass, literary and literacy studies became
elaborated and consolidated in the textbook genres that are examined in Carr, Carr, and Schultz’s
Archives of Instruction: Nineteenth-Century Rhetorics, Readers, and Composition Books in the United
States. I will conclude with one of those genres, anthologies of literature. Before returning to the one
that I quoted at the beginning of this chapter, I will examine how the professorships of rhetoric I
discussed in the last chapter evolved into the first professorships of literature. While linguistic and
literary studies did not establish a specialized "research base" until the next century, one of the most
noted of the first professors of literature had gained enough standing by 1876 that he was able to use
an outside offer from a research university to free himself from teaching composition. Francis Child
had disdained the duty of commenting on compositions ever since he became the fourth Boylston
Professorship of Rhetoric and Oratory in 1851. Upon taking the position he redefined his senior course
from "Rhetoric and Criticism" to "English Language and Literature" to relate it to the research he had
undertaken on Chaucer in his graduate studies in Germany (Paine 86). Such developments mark out
the priorities and boundaries that would come to define the profession.
A good way to benchmark these emerging trends is to consider how they affected what
students wrote. A couple of benchmarks I have examined are the writings of John Fitch at Yale (where
he graduated in 1803) and John Brackett (Brown graduate of 1857).61 Fitch's work in a literary society
complemented his studies of rhetoric and oratorical literature, which extended to taking detailed notes
on sermons and the court cases that he attended to begin to learn the law. Fitch wrote essays on the
press, state-required schooling, immigration, emancipation, and the dispossession of Native
Americans. A half century later, Brackett’s writings have a distinctly less oratorical and more
belletristic feel. At Brown, as at most colleges at mid century, writing across the curriculum
requirements still shaped students’ whole program of study, but the cross curricular requirements were
losing their sense of purpose.62 Brackett’s essays adopt a belletristic style that is quite different from
61
Fitch's writings include two books of forensic debates from his junior and senior years, class notes, a
diary recording his studies, and a notebook on his independent reading. His fourteen junior-year compositions
range from three to over ten pages, while his senior essays run to over twenty pages. Brackett wrote ten essays
and nine forensic disputations for the Professor of Rhetoric and English Literature (created in 1850). Ten essays
are extant from his sophomore physiology course and nine from his junior history course. According to the Laws
for Brown of 1852-53, Brackett was required to deliver weekly declamations in his first two years. He also had
to write essays every two weeks in his second and third years, and deliver an original oration monthly in his last
two years. Cash awards were given for the best essays in each area of study: modern and classical literatures,
rhetoric, history and moral philosophy, natural philosophy, engineering, and "chemistry applied to the arts."
62
In the curricula of thirty-five Eastern colleges between 1850 and 1860, Wozniak found that one third
required compositions every semester. On average, all students wrote compositions in over three-quarters of
their semesters (Wozniak 36-37).
67
the oratorical stance that Fitch had set out in the compositions he delivered before the assembled
college. While Fitch spoke to public issues in a self-consciously rhetorical manner, Brackett wrote
about such topics as the "Development of Milton's Genius" in a style that lacks the same clarity of
audience and purpose.
Fitch and Brackett adopted different standpoints in their writings because the subject positions
set out for students shifted in the first half of the nineteenth century as English studies moved away
from the oratorical perspective that had been set out by the noted professorships at Harvard and Yale.
The Boylston Professorship of Rhetoric and Oratory that was founded at Harvard in 1805 has been
discussed by Reid, Douglas, and Paine. The provisions for the professorship were taken almost
verbatim from Ward's neoclassical Lectures on Oratory. Public lectures on oratory were to be
delivered to seniors and resident graduates, while freshmen were to be taught classical rhetoric.
Sophomores and juniors were to be taught modern rhetoric, elocution, and composition, and professors
were also supposed to correct students’ compositions, though when Adams took the chair, he insisted
that work be assigned to a teaching assistant. Parallel developments followed upon the founding of the
Professor of Rhetoric and Oratory at Yale in 1817 as a result of proposals from influential "gentlemen
in the State" (Corporation Records, July 22, 1817). The Professorship was held from 1817 to 1839 by
Chauncy Goodrich, whose Select British Eloquence established the canons of rhetorical criticism that
remained influential in Speech into the next century.63 In addition to his public lectures to seniors,
Goodrich taught a first-year composition course. Notes from Goodrich's "First Lessons in English
Composition" show that he worked closely with students' writing, though the work reportedly helped
break his health (Corporation Records 9/14/1825). At his retirement in 1839, the professorship was
renamed the Professor of Rhetoric and English Literature (Minutes 10/23/1839).
This transition turned upon the belletristic conception of literature popularized by Blair’s
Lectures on Rhetoric and Belles Lettres. Blair's Lectures remained the most widely adopted college
text into the 1840s, when it was surpassed by those of George Campbell and Richard Whately (see
Carr, et al. 33-49). American publishers produced sixty-six full editions and seventy-four
abridgements of Blair's Lectures. Blair’s doctrines were reduced to a methodical system for the
expanding textbook market in abridgements that distilled lectures down to formulaic precepts on taste
and style with questions and answers for students to recite. As a predecessor to the discussion
questions still included in readers for composition classes, this Q&A format translated traditional
recitation methods of instruction into technically sophisticated textbooks with complex layouts and
typefaces. The precepts of Blair, Campbell, and Whately were even more broadly disbursed by other
popular textbook authors such as Samuel Newman, Henry Day, and a host of other imitators.64 The
scope of these texts is evident in their most popular English competitor— Jamieson's Grammar of
Rhetoric and Polite Literature: Comprehending the Principles of Language and Style, The Elements of
Taste and Criticism; with Rules for the Study of Composition and Eloquence Illustrated by
Appropriate Examples, Selected Chiefly from the British Classics (1826). Neatly packaged in a handy
format, these encyclopedias of the literate culture promised to purify students’ taste, improve their
writing, and introduce them to a modern sense of the “classics.”
As Sharon Crowley has discussed while these textbooks were highly "derivative. . ., the first
generation of nineteenth-century American rhetoric textbooks represented serious attempts to adapt the
63
The place of elocution in the curriculum can be traced back to the first American edition of Sheridan's
Rhetorical Grammar in 1783 under the supervision of the Professor of English and Oratory at the University of
Pennsylvania. Sheridan's Lectures on Elocution was reprinted at Providence in 1796 (see Benzie). The scientific
aspirations of Speech were first set out in The Philosophy of the Human Voice by Benjamin Rush's nephew
James Rush (see Wozniak, Hochmuth and Murphy, and Connors).
64
The most popular American-authored rhetoric was A Practical System of Rhetoric by Samuel
Newman, who served as Professor of Rhetoric and Oratory at Bowdoin College from 1824 to 1839 (see
Kremers; Carr, et al. 48). Newman's textbook went through sixty editions and printings. A student of Goodrich's,
Henry N. Day, published Elements of the Art of Rhetoric, the “most original” textbook of the time according to
Connors (221). Blair also shaped the next generation of textbooks, including Quackenbos's Advanced Course of
Composition and Rhetoric, which had an extensive apparatus of exercises on syntax along with guidelines for
compositions and advice for teachers on correcting papers—all laid out to provide an efficient pedagogy for
overworked writing teachers.
68
principles of British discourse theory into a form suitable for young or inexperienced writers"
(Methodical 57). Crowley’s focus on the uses of rhetoric to teach composition is well taken.
According to the content analysis of eighty-six rhetoric and composition textbooks reported in Nietz,
almost a quarter of the textbooks published before 1830 gave little or no attention to composition,
while books published after that date devoted up to fifty percent of their pages to the topic. At the
same time, oratory declined in emphasis, with over a third of textbooks after 1830 ignoring it
completely. Taste was similarly deemphasized. Taste was not discussed in over two thirds of
textbooks after 1830 (Nietz 24). These changes mark the historical shift from rhetoric and belles lettres
to the approach to composition that developed out of attempts to help increasing numbers of less
prepared students write without overwhelming faculty, many of whom were growing tired of the
traditional regime of orations, declamations, and themes. These attitudes contributed to the decline of
rhetoric, and to the subordination of composition instruction to a modern conception of literature.
At the same time that rhetoric was being reduced to the mechanics of composition, upper-level
courses were shifting to a more modern conception of literature. The last professor to lecture on
rhetoric to Harvard seniors was Edward Channing. Channing saw oratory as an art whose time had
passed. He shifted college English studies to focus on "the written book, the novel, the history, the
fable, and the acted play" (33). Channing was repelled by the popular orators who prompted his
student Emerson to marvel over how the "overpowering personality" of a speaker could take
"sovereign possession of the audience" ("Eloquence" 7: 79, 65; see also Warren 24-25, 48).65 Such
orators had been put under "restraints” in modern society according to Channing:
A modern debate is not a contest between a few leading men for a triumph over each other and
an ignorant multitude; the orator himself is but one of the multitude, deliberating with them
upon common interests, which are well understood and valued by all. (17)
By identifying debaters as representatives of the “multitude” (rather than as orators vying for control
over it), this passage conveys sentiments that Wallace Douglas and Susan Miller have characterized as
"truly radical" and "startling . . . democratic" (Douglas 116, Susan Miller, Textual 62).66 Channing was
responding to the democratization of reading that had blurred the distinction between "our popular or
literary speech" (243). Faced with the appearance of the first mass medium, Channing taught students
to resist the sensationalism of the penny press, as Paine has discussed (75-76). To teach students "the
restraint of taste,” Channing delivered lectures on the virtues of "Habits of Reading," on how to form
"Literary Tribunals," and on the "Forms of Criticism” that would maintain self-composure.
As a former editor of the leading literary magazine of the times, The North American Review,
Channing had a sense of his field of study that was quite different from a neoclassical republican such
as Adams. That difference is apparent in an oration on "Literary Independence" that Channing
delivered in 1818 before the first Greek letter student society, Phi Beta Kappa. This oration is the most
direct point of contact between the teachings of Channing and the broader literary class represented by
Channing’s student Ralph Waldo Emerson. Channing discussed "The American Scholar" in terms that
resonate with Emerson's essays (3). Channing advised students to rise above provincialism and create
a national literature. With an oratorical flourish, Channing concluded by repeating the call to
"Cultivate domestic literature" six times to exhort his audience to inculcate the critical habits of mind
needed to rise above "local distinctions" and "meet on one ground" in the field of literary studies (4).
This call to "cultivate domestic literature" celebrated the expansion of literary studies beyond the
neoclassical public sphere to include broader classes of readers and writers. Oratorical studies had
prepared the literate to preach virtue and argue the law in a public sphere where a private citizen was
an oxymoron, while modern literary studies enabled students with more diverse aspirations to acquire
65
Clark and Halloran argue that the "tendency to ground rhetoric in the private experience of the
individual" marks the historical transition from the neoclassical rhetorics of Witherspoon and Adams through the
belletristic emphasis on taste to the literary orientation that emerged with Channing (17).
66
While previous generations had taught students with little access to print and largely uncontested
power to speak for the public, Channing lived in a world of print, in which "opinions are constantly coming to us
from . . . all parts of the world, through many channels, and we are thus enabled to instruct ourselves, and to
think liberally and independently on all subjects, and especially on the opinions that are most current at home,
and which the ancient orator might have appealed to with unresisted and terrible power. In the ancient republics,
the orator might control the audience, but now we see the audience controlling him" (16-17).
69
a shared cultural base for their professional aspirations. In basic respects, literary studies functioned as
a representative institution of self-governance comparable to those that Rush had envisioned. The
modes of representation by which the literate were to shape the literature of the time are addressed in
Channing’s concluding course lecture on "Permanent Literary Fame," which discusses how critics
serve as representatives for the "fair-minded common reader" by setting out the "laws of the mind"
that give authority to "canons of criticism" (285-89).
Channing provided a prominent justification for the sorts of courses that were becoming
common in the more broadly based institutions that I discussed earlier in this chapter.67 One of the
more rigorous was the survey of literature course that Francis March taught in an academy from 1845,
and then at Lafayette College from 1855. Forty years later March was enlisted to describe his course in
English in American Universities by Professors in the English Departments of Twenty Representative
Institutions (which is discussed in the next chapter). March’s popular Method of Philological Study of
the English Language (1865) was often hailed by later critics as a pioneering contribution to the
professional literature. In the first issue of PMLA in 1884, Theodore Hunt cited Lafayette College as
the first to “fully recognize” English studies, and embarrassingly added that the fullest programs of
study tended to be in “the smaller and weaker colleges of the South and West” (119). After
introductory philological studies of Anglo Saxon, March’s textbook includes units on Chaucer,
Shakespeare, Milton, Bunyan, and Spenser. March's pedagogy assumed that students would have
broad access to literary works and critical commentaries. Writing assignments focused on biographies,
plot synopses, and historical backgrounds. March called upon "Professors of Rhetoric" to give over
some assignments to writing for "reviews and magazines" (iii-vi). Much of the textbook is comprised
of several lines from a literary work along with a list of questions for discussions of the minutia of
style and historical sources. March focused on the "study of the language as it is found in masterpieces
of literature, the immediate aim being the interpretation of these masterpieces, the rethinking of the
thoughts of master minds, and storing the memory with their minds" ("Teaching" 76). With such texts,
literary and literacy studies shifted from preparing students to speak for the public and began to
concentrate more on instilling responsiveness to representative masterpieces.
At such historic transitions, one can see how shifts in the field of study have set out distinctive
modes of authorship and readership that have differentiated the truly literate from less critical readers
and more popular writers. Some of the most widely adopted surveys of literature were derived from
Shaw's Outlines of English Literature, a compendium originally drawn up by a Cambridge graduate to
teach Russian nobles English tastes. This remarkably transcultural text became the source for
generations of popular American textbooks.68 These texts followed upon the technological innovations
in the composition market to advertise a "modern text-book form" complete with varied typefaces and
tables (Backus 400). In addition to providing students with overviews of Anglo-American history,
these textbooks traced out genealogies of "master minds" with critical commentaries. Literary studies
67
Nietz details how English textbooks evolved from readers with literary excerpts, through histories that
surveyed periods and genres, to the anthologies that instituted a modern sense of literature. One of the first
advanced readers was Lindley Murray’s English Reader (1799). Early histories of literary genres included John
Dunlop’s History of Fiction (1814), Walter Scott’s Biographical and Critical Notices of Eminent Novelists
(1825), and John Hart’s Class Book of Poetry (1844). Scott’s textbook is a good example of how surveys of
literature evolved in tandem with increased access to literature, for the text was part of the popular reprint series
Ballantyne's Novelists Library. A more comprehensive survey was provided by Robert Chambers’ Cyclopaedia
of English Literature (1843-4) and Samuel Goodrich’s Literature, Ancient and Modern, with Specimens (1845).
Among the more popular histories of literature were Charles Cleveland’s A Compendium of English Literature
(1848) and his more advanced English Literature of the Nineteenth Century (1852), which developed out of his
literature courses in a female academy. Also popular in normal schools and academies were Rickard and Orcutt’s
Class Book of Prose and Poetry (1847) and William Spalding’s The History of English Literature (1853). These
evolving genres are examined in detail by Carr, Carr, and Schultz.
68
After graduating from Cambridge, Shaw went to Russia to teach English literature at St. Petersburg in
the Imperial Alexander Lyceum. Despite their plodding style and deadening minutiae, Shaw's textbooks were
widely used in American high schools, academies, and colleges. Redactions of Shaw’s text proliferated into
"Shaw's New Series of English and American Literature," a series of textbooks authored by professors who
taught at Vassar and institutions such as Packer Collegiate Institute.
70
still included philosophy and history as well as poetry, novels, dramas, and essays. As in March’s
textbook, studies of Anglo Saxon provided philological rigor to the project of using English literature
to teach Americans the values of the "Anglo-Saxon race." That hyphenated identity was formed by a
history of conquest and assimilation that demonstrated, according to Backus, the “inevitable law" that
"guides the North American Indians to the certain fate that must come from their contact with the
same Anglo-Saxon race." The supremacy of that race was represented in "the lives and the works of
the great men who have contributed to the riches of our literature." Studies of such masterworks
helped aspiring students to eradicate dialectical differences and identify themselves with an “AngloSaxon” heritage that might not be theirs by birth but could become theirs with study (Backus 7, 5).
One can see how such surveys of literature departed from belletristic concerns for style and
taste in Henry Reed's Lectures on English Literature, which was published posthumously in 1855. In
his introduction, Reed's brother justified publishing the unrevised lectures from Reed’s course at the
University of Pennsylvania by characterizing them "as popular lectures, or rather essays at lectures"
(xv). Reed repudiates the "shallow criticism" of Blair and Kames because he felt that a rigorous
discipline could not be founded upon "that vapid, half-naturalized term 'belles-lettres.'" Belletristic was
already being repudiated for having treated literature as "an easy, indolent cultivation, a sort of
passive, patrician pleasure, instead of demanding dutiful and studious and strenuous energy" (34-35).
Invoking De Quincy's influential distinction between the literatures of "knowledge" and "power," Reed
demarcated writings that merely conveyed information from those concerned with moving audiences.
Literary critics were to sort through the "multitude of books" addressed to particular sects, professions,
and parties to concentrate on close readings of those that spoke for "universal humanity" (53, 30). In
our "liberal communion with books," our "womanly thought and feeling" will "mingle naturally with
men's judgments" to establish "literature as a means of culture of character, manly and womanly" (45).
Such assessments facilitated a broadly based historical transition in literacy studies that revised
republican virtues to adapt to the expansion of civil society to include public roles for women as
teachers of self-refinement.
Textbooks such as Reed's surveyed centuries of literature in a way that is commonplace today,
though they represented a distinct innovation at the time. While the doctrines of taste and sympathy
that Blair popularized provided a moral justification for literary study, he had examined literary genres
from a rhetorical stance concerned with teaching students how to compose them, while Reed surveyed
varied literary genres and concluded by confining his discussion of writing to the most domestic of
genres—letters. Reading and writing became distinct domains of experience as literature became
organized historically to help students appreciate that "the true enjoyment of books is when there is a
cooperating power in the reader's mind—an active sympathy with the book" (Reed 48). In such
passages, one can see how the expansion and consolidation of literacy and schooling gave rise to a
modern sense of literature in which the literate invested their creative efforts in reading texts
responsively, without presuming that they might themselves compose works of literature. Such
distinctions emerged with the transition from belles lettres to literature, in the modern sense of the
term, as can be seen in Wozniak's study of thirty-six Eastern college curricula. In the 1850s, courses in
rhetoric and composition were offered in one third of the sample through departments that included
literature in their title, with another third including the term belles lettres as part of the name of the
department. A decade later literature had become a distinguishing term in one half of the sample and
belles lettres had fallen to less than a quarter. This transition was integral to the changes in literacy and
schooling that followed upon expansions in educational access and the shift from intensive to
expansive habits of reading that blurred the distinctions between leisurely and critical forms of
literacy—distinctions that a modern sense of literature focused on sorting out.
The conception of literature as something to be consumed but not composed was consistent
with the expansion of the reading public, and with the conceptions of consumer society propounded by
professors of rhetoric and moral philosophy such as Adam Smith (see Miller, Formation of College
English). The expansion of print blurred the boundaries of the learned culture, as in Britain, but a
belletristic stance was harder to establish in revolutionary American than in post-Union Scotland.
Witherspoon and his contemporaries adopted a more oratorical and less belletristic stance to address
the political controversies of the time, and literary hierarchies proved to be more difficult to institute in
America because Britain had an established class hierarchy and a cultural capital that provided
71
cosmopolitan standards by which middle-class provincials could distinguish themselves. The
American republic of letters did not have a courtly literature or a metropolitan center. As larger towns
grew into cities, they came to be seen not as cosmopolitan centers but as a blight on the landscape—an
underworld run by crooks and overrun with immigrants.69 The small town ethos of middle-class
culture created considerable challenges for efforts to demarcate provincial and polite tastes in music,
art, theater, and literature (see Levine). To those versed in a more cosmopolitan sense of literature,
previous efforts to establish a distinctly American literature were merely a sign of provincialism. As
James Russell Lowell wrote in a review of Longfellow’s Kavanagh in 1849, “mere nationality is no
more nor less than so much provincialism. . . . Literature survives, not because of its nationality, but in
spite of it” (9-10). Such cosmopolitan men of letters repudiated their predecessors’ calls to “produce a
national literature, as if it were some school exercise in composition to be handed in by a certain day”
(11).70
Lowell repudiated the didactic stance assumed by belletristic conceptions that looked to
popular writers such as Longfellow as models to imitate and not just study.71 That standpoint is
maintained by the textbook with which I began this chapter. Tuckerman’s “A Sketch of American
Literature” was published in 1852 in Shaw’s Outlines of English Literature. Tuckerman’s revised
“Sketch” was included in several of the popular revisions of Shaw’s text, including A New History of
English and American Literature with Henry T. Tuckerman’s Sketch of American Literature. Backus
surveys British literature from the Normans to nineteenth-century novelists (along with references to a
companion anthology). In the passage quoted at the beginning of this chapter, Tuckerman stated that
“the two most prolific branches of literature in America are journalism and educational works. . . .
Newspapers and schoolbooks are, therefore, the characteristic form of literature in the United States”
(Backus 357). Tuckerman perpetuates a pre-modern conception of literature that includes didactic
literature, and also rhetoric, insofar as “oratory is eminently the literature of republics” (Backus 358).
The “germ of American literature” was, according to Tuckerman, the antebellum “reviews, lectures,
and essays,” which he characterized as “that delightful species of literature which is neither criticism
nor fiction—neither oratory nor history—but partakes somewhat of all these, and owes its claim to a
felicitous blending of fact and fancy, of sentiment and thought—the belles lettres of writing of our
country” (375, 377). This belletristic conception of literature as something for students to write and
not just read was repudiated as academics came to assume a cosmopolitan disdain for the literature of
self-improvement and the informal cultural networks in which that literature circulated.
Conclusion: Literature and Literacy in the Extracurriculum
The paragon of literacy shifted from an oratorical through a belletristic to an aesthetic frame of
reference as literacy studies were restructured to accommodate the diversification of the public sphere
by the expansion of print literacy in the first half of the nineteenth century. As in earlier periods,
literacy and literacy studies evolved with developments in the literate, and the modes by which they
were represented in the literature of the time. In the seventeenth century, literacy was shaped by
scribal modes of learning that followed a deductive epistemology and culminated with religious
literature to prepare graduates to preach received beliefs in isolated communities. Colonial society
became more diversified in the eighteenth century, especially in the middle colonies where English
69
From the first census in 1790 to the seventh in 1860, Philadelphia grew from 42,520 to 565,529, and
Boston grew from 18,038 to 177,840. New York evolved from a group of towns into a city of over a million,
with Manhattan along growing from 33,131 to 813,669. "The result was urban chaos" (Bender 34).
70
School readers became “standardized” in the 1860s according to Windhover, who found Longfellow
to be the most popular author in the ninety anthologies she reviewed from the third quarter of the nineteenth
century. Longfellow and other “school poets” such as Irving were the most anthologized authors because they
provided moral platitudes that displayed “a spiritual meaning in even the smallest aspect of nature” (Windhover
31). Daniel Webster was more popular than Shakespeare, though he became more frequently anthologized when
his works were included on college admissions tests in the 1870s.
71
American literature was a mainstay of antebellum readers. Textbooks on the subject included Frost’s
The Class Book of American Literature (1826); Knapp’s Lectures on American Literature (1829), Duyckinck’s
Cyclopaedia of American Literature (1856), and Grisswold’s Poets and Poetry of America (1842), Prose Writers
of America (1847), and Female Poets of America (1849).
72
courses were first introduced into emerging colleges. Those courses attended to syntactic formalities
and oratorical modalities that became more of a concern as literacy became defined by print and the
public authority of the literate became more contested. After the political debates over independence
and the constitution of the republic, an oratorical conception of literature persisted as republican
reformers worked to institute representative forms of self-governance in varied spheres of civil
society. Efforts were made to establish a national language and literature as education expanded to
include women and others who were able to earn an independent living by teaching, lecturing in
lyceum networks, and writing for belletristic magazines. The literature of self-improvement helped to
instill standards of taste and usage that had become blurred as the literate culture expanded beyond
learned languages and expensive folios. That blurring of boundaries gave rise to a literacy campaign
with several fronts. At an elemental level, it included state-mandated schooling systems, and on a
higher plain, a back to basics campaign was launched to limit access to liberal education to those who
had mastered learned languages. Even as the Yale Report attempted to defend that position, its base
was shifting as English came to replace Latin as the means to gain access to higher education, and
through it the professions.
College English is today so fully elaborated as an academic discipline that the antebellum
period appears to us to be part of the prehistory of the profession, as Gerry Graff has discussed.
Looking back from a broader perspective on literary and literacy studies, we may be able to
acknowledge that the “profession of literature” is but a chapter in the history of college English
teaching. From that perspective, we can come to acknowledge that the conceptions of literature that
divorce it from its applications are what have made it the consummate school subject. While every
discipline constitutes its objects of study through the methods used to study them, the methods of
literary study tend to be even more didactic than the methods of most disciplines because literary
criticism produces readings that serve to teach people how to read. Literature was not constituted as a
course of study unto itself until education developed into a gradated system that could undergrid the
differentiation of disciplines. The basic structure of that system began to emerge in the middle of the
nineteenth century. Grade schools had largely replaced grammar schools by the Civil War, and in the
subsequent decade a quarter million students in thirty-six states were attending six thousand
academies. Most were coeducational, and many were already evolving into gradated high schools
(Cohen, Education in the US, 2: xv-xvi). Those academies overlapped into the normal schools that
provided lower-class colleges for lower-class students, who were channeled back into primary schools
to expand the base of the educational system. That system propagated the “ideology of literacy” that
instilled a faith in schooling as a means to progress through refinement (see Soltow and Stevens).
Teaching that faith to the less educated was seen to be women’s work, for over sixty percent of
teachers were women (Cohen, Education in the US, 1316-17).
While the modern equation of literacy with schooling came into focus in the antebellum
period, the belletristic literature of the time also circulated beyond classrooms through what has been
characterized as the “extracurriculum.” The cultural networks and periodical literature that I have
surveyed have been identified by Applebee as part of the historical sources of modern English studies,
and Gerry Graff has also looked to the “cluster of literary societies, debating clubs, student literary
publications, and public lectures and lyceums” as a forerunner to the academic apparatus of the
profession (Graff Professing 44). These “agencies of intellect” have been put forward to challenge the
confines of our profession by Anne Ruggles Gere. The associative networks and self-instruction
literature of the antebellum period take on renewed relevance with the interactive literacies and
networks that have gained currency as the “culture of the book” has come to occupy a position
comparable to that which classical literature assumed a century ago. Literature takes on different
representative functions when positioned in the associative networks formed by lyceums, libraries, and
periodicals that were more accessible to women, workers, and people of color than institutions of
higher education, as has also been detailed by McHenry and Heath and others cited in this chapter. The
“rise of literature as a college subject with its own departments and programs coincided with the
collapse of the communal literary culture and the corresponding estrangement of literature from its
earlier function in polite society” (Graff Professing 20). Now that many of those departments are
themselves threaten with collapse by the assignment of the majority of English courses to temporary
and part-time instructors, it seems prudent to reassess our historical alternatives.
73
The profession of college English teaching has been shaped by oppositions that emerged a
century ago, most notably the historical opposition of liberal and professional education. This
opposition worked to undercut the professionalism of teaching, as I have tried to establish in this
chapter. That opposition begins to shape the political economy of higher education not just in the
reactionary stance set out by the Yale Report but also in the positions staked out by reformers such as
Francis Wayland and John Quincy, who sought to accommodate those who did not value "classical
literature" but wanted to have the "distinction" of a "liberal education" (Quincy 12). Such
accommodations would end up reducing liberal education to general education. The classics had
served to prepare students for the learned professions, but liberal and professional studies were set in
opposition to each other as professors of classical literature and languages came to adopt a studied
impracticality to distance themselves from those who looked to education to gain practical
advancement, including the rising numbers of working-class and women students looking to teaching
as a means to social advancement. With the transition to a modern sense of the classics of literature,
that position hardened into the “literary antiprofessionalism” of modern literary studies, as Stanley
Fish has discussed (“Profession” 353).
The opposition of liberal and professional education became established as a principle of
stratification in higher education with the institution of land grant colleges.72 While land had been
granted to new states to establish academies and colleges as early as 1804, the Morrill Act of 1862
provided the resources needed to transform normal schools into state university systems. The purpose
of the Act was “to promote the liberal and practical education of the industrial classes in the several
pursuits and professions of life” (qtd. Lucas American Higher Education 148). According to Lucas, it
was not easy to convince farmers and miners of the values of higher education.73 Then as now, it was
assumed that the best way to articulate those values to the less educated is with practical appeals to
utilitarian needs. This assumption positioned the liberal arts on a higher plain divorced from the
menial concerns of working people. Such assumptions set up literature as an appropriate study for the
most literate, and consign working people to vocational tracks that deaden their imaginative capacities
with relentlessly methodical instruction. These class politics may serve the needs of those who work in
elite institutions, but defining literature by its impracticality undercuts the teaching of literature and
literacy by denying their pragmatic uses and political power. An alternative to the disabling dualism of
professional and liberal education is provided by the community-based intellectuals who set out a
practically engaged conception of literature that was responsive to the experience of those with less
formal education, as I will discuss further when I turn to other alternative perspectives on literature
and learning in the progressive era.74
72
The contributions of state universities to the development of civil society can be benchmarked by
noting how they began to credential varied areas of middle-class work: Among the first were the medical degrees
established at Maryland (1807), Virginia (1819), Vermont (1822), and Michigan (1850). Law programs were
founded at Virginia (1819), Indiana (1838), North Carolina and Alabama (1845), and Mississippi (1854). Majors
were also established in dentistry at Maryland (1840), in engineering at Alabama (1837), in agriculture at
Rutgers (1864), and in pharmacy at South Carolina (1865). Notably missing from this list is education, with one
of the first baccalaureate-degree programs being the one at Mississippi in 1868 (Wahlberg and Thonton 3).
73
The contested class politics at work in the expansion of professionalism are pointedly addressed in A
Plan for an Industrial University for the State of Illinois (1851) by Jonathan Baldwin Turner, who was
instrumental in persuading Congressman Justin Morrill to introduce the Land Grant College Act. As a lobbyist
for the “Illinois Industrial Association,” Turner promoted the values of “INDUSTRIAL LITERATURE” to align
workers with capitalists against the monopoly imposed on higher education by the “PROFESSIONAL” class
(rptd. in Crane 174). Turner assumed that only “the literary and clerical” classes really needed “to become
writers and talkers.” This assumption reinforced his utilitarian tendency to divorce imaginative literature from
the practical needs of working people (184; see Danika Brown’s “Hegemony and the Discourse of the Land
Grant Movement”).
74
As an example of an alternative conception of literature that is consistent with the civic
professionalism of the antebellum period, I will discuss works such as Victoria Earle Matthews's "The Value of
Race Literature” (see ***).
74
CHAPTER FOUR
HOW THE TEACHING OF LITERACY
GAVE RISE TO THE PROFESSION OF LITERATURE
Universities should not allow themselves to be drawn into “such enterprises as professional
training, undergraduate instruction, supervision and guidance of the secondary school system,
edification of the unlearned by ‘university extension’ and similar excursions into the field of
public amusement, training of secondary school teachers, encouragement of amateurs by
‘correspondence,’ etc.. . . .The work of teaching properly belongs in the university only
because and in so far as it incites and facilitates the university man’s work of inquiry”
Thorstein Veblen, The Higher Learning in America: A Memorandum
on the Conduct of Universities by Business Men (1918)
Thorstein Veblen’s The Higher Learning in America is as pointed as his better-known account
of “conspicuous consumption” in his Theory of the Leisure Class in 1899 (396). Veblen complained
that universities were being “given over to the pragmatic, utilitarian disciplines” (34). The
“disinterestedness” of traditional intellectuals would be undermined if universities’ did not establish a
critical distance from the rest of public education. While schools were intended to prepare students for
“civil life,” universities should remain aloof from teaching anything practical, for teaching itself
“properly belongs in the university only. . . in so far as it incites and facilitates the university man’s
work of inquiry” (17). Veblen upheld the “scientist and scholar” as a different class from teachers.
“Schoolmasters and utilitarians” served as a popular enemy that enabled scholars and critics to make
common cause with scientists, and even social scientists such as Veblen (though social scientists were
often identified with the utilitarians by humanists who resented encroachments on their cultural
authority).75 Veblen’s condemnations of commercialization, bureaucracy, and vocationalism set out an
academics’ enemies list that has remained remarkably constant for almost a century. Through the last
century, this vision shaped traditional academics’ shared sense of mission, while all around them
universities were developing into engines of economic development that enabled aspiring middle-class
professionals to rise above the provincialism of their local communities and be credentialed as experts.
By dismissing the technical and applied disciplines that were coming to dominate universities,
traditional academics could ignore the fact that they were in fact educators who faced some of the
same challenges as their coworkers in the schools.
Those challenges increased considerably as the educational system expanded. The imposition
of written entrance exams and required first-year composition courses was a response to a series of
changes that transformed literacy studies and teaching. These changes are set out in the noted Harvard
Report of the Committee on Composition and Rhetoric in 1897: as a result of rising enrollments,
classes increased in size nearly fourfold, so as to become wholly unmanageable for oral
recitation, and the elective system was greatly enlarged; step by step, the oral method of
instruction was then abandoned, and a system of lectures, with periodical written
examinations, took its place, so that at last the whole college work was practically done in
writing. The need of facility in written expression was, of course, correspondingly increased.
As evident in this passage from the last of the four Harvard Reports, writing skills became a problem
with the diversification of learning and the learned. Broader classes of students gained access as the
numbers of high school students doubled each decade.76 The increases broke up the confines of the
75
A prominent example of how professors of English distinguished themselves from teachers of English
is provided by James Morgan Hart’s influential German Universities: A Narrative of Personal Experience
(1874). Hart was a professor of rhetoric and philology, but in his vision of his duties, “the professor is not a
teacher” because “his duty begins and ends with himself” (2: 578). The “professor is his own master,”
“accountable only to himself for his opinions and mode of living” (2: 577).
76
In 1890, high school enrollments were 298,000 (5.6% of 14-17 year olds), in 1900 630,000 (10%), in
1910 1 million (14.3%), in 1920 2.4 million (31.2%), and in 1930 4.7 million (50.7%) (Angus and Mirel 203).
For the first time most high school teachers were college graduates—seventy percent of male teachers and fiftythree percent of females in the 1890s (Borrowman 129; Krug 187). The rise in college attendance from 3% in
75
curriculum and fueled specialization in public education and throughout the public sphere. The rising
enrollments and diversification of disciplines overwhelmed oral modes of instruction, and recitations
were replaced by lectures and exams that changed how knowledge was acquired and assessed. Writing
became “an implement essential” to all educated work in the classroom as elsewhere.77 Entrance
exams were instituted to require students to write essays on eight literary works. As such exams spread
across the country, they served to justify the spread of first-year composition courses, and the
departments built upon them.
As exams in vernacular literacy became the gateway to college, English assumed the role that
Latin had played in upholding the learned culture. Given the forces at work, that role was cast in a way
that played out rather surprisingly. Then as now, most English courses were in composition, and
reformers called for the teaching of writing to alleviate the literacy crisis publicized by the Harvard
reports. Another possible disciplinary configuration was provided by philology. Philology was an
appealing candidate because it combined the promise of the sciences with the prestige of classical
languages. Defining the discipline as an "historical scientific study" was seen to be a way to force out
amateurs and dissuade "utilitarians" from reducing the discipline to a service mission (H. C. G. Brandt
61). However, the rigor of philology’s linguistic methods was difficult to sustain in the courses that
proliferated as English became the most popular major at Harvard and many other colleges at the
beginning of the twentieth century (Sol Cohen 2745-8). A more teachable subject emerged from the
surveys of literature that had been introduced before the Civil War. According to Graff, "the
profession of literature" issued from the late nineteenth-century "union of Arnoldian humanism and
scientific research," though "the teaching of literature could never have achieved its central status"
without the "enterprise" of composition (Professing 3, 2). Those involved with that “enterprise” have
taken issue with accounts of how the teaching of writing became subordinated to the profession of
literature (see Friend). In the last chapter, I examined the transition from oratorical to aesthetic
conceptions of literature that emerged from the expansion and diversification of literacy and the
ltierate. In this chapter, I will examine how English studies were shaped by the professionalization of
literacy and literacy studies.
Like many other fields of work, the teaching of English in college became structured by the
historical tendency of professions to download onerous responsibilities unto paraprofessionals such as
nurses, paralegals, and adjuncts. General education was assigned to junior faculty and teaching
assistants to establish reduced workloads for an elite class of research faculty. In English departments,
as in other professional organizations, the process of downloading time-consuming service work unto
paraprofessionals was complicated by the need to control the methods for producing and reproducing
the profession’s distinctive forms of expertise. The reproductive systems of professions are often
controlled in a tacit manner to avoid raising questions about the ways professions work. By denying
that they taught for a living, professors could treat teaching as an informal process that required no
professional expertise, unlike research, which was upheld as the guiding purpose of the profession.
There actually was very little funding for research outside agriculture until mid century, and even then
research in the humanities largely depended upon resources that were freed up by teaching general
education on a mass scale. English departments were able to tacitly ignore their reliance on general
education as long as they were able to presume that the research enterprise was a single
undifferentiated mission. This "tacit component" of professional expertise is, according to Wilensky,
fundamental to its "tenacious conservativism" (149). This conservative tendency is evident in how
English departments have divorced their professional purposes from their basic institutional functions
in ways that reduced introductory courses to mechanics, undercut the standing of teaching, and
marginalized the more expansive potentials of the discipline’s power base.
1890 to 12% in 1930 can be accounted for largely by the increases in female students, mostly in normal schools
(Burke 262; Gary Miller 31).
77
David Russell examines how literate technologies shaped the formation of modern systems of
expertise, as evident in the use of efficiency experts to reduce work to written routines. Such technological
innovations as the invention of the typewriter in the 1870s enabled the development of complex organizations
and new types of work. For example, the number of stenographers increased from 154 in 1870 to 112,000 at the
end of the century.
76
At the beginning of the twentieth century, academics in English and other fields that
encompassed domains of public discourse consolidated their professional standing by distinguishing
their expertise from the services of less credentialed practitioners.78 High school teachers were still
sometimes called professors, but that changed as academics distanced themselves from practitioners,
as in the cases of social scientists and social workers, linguists and grammarians, and academic critics
and literary journalists.79 In teaching, as in other applied areas, practitioners were more likely to be
women, working class, or people of color. Such professional distinctions are difficult to draw,
according to Wilensky, when "the lay public cannot recognize the need for special competence in an
area where everyone is 'expert'" (145, see also Shils). The discipline's concentration on literature as its
distinctive area of expertise thus presented distinctive challenges. Literature was understood to be the
province of any well-read person. In response to the popularity of literature, many founders of the
profession set themselves up as scholars rather than critics. Teacher seems not to have been a viable
option for aspiring academics. There are more and less obvious reasons for that. In the antebellum
period, teaching had replaced preaching as the principal conduit for those from the lower classes
looking to move up through education. Normal schools were largely responsible for the diversification
that is often cited as proof that the research university expanded access to underrepresented groups.
Thirty percent of students were in normal schools in 1900, as compared to only four percent in 1860
according to Burke. While normal schools were "almost exclusively female institutions," their
character changed as they moved up in the college market to become teachers’ colleges and then
universities (Mattingly 150; see also Harmon 88). This movement decreased attention to teaching and
teachers, not simply because research had more prestige, but because the prestige of any college is
determined by the standing of its graduates, and teaching offered status only to those who had none.
While such attitudes positioned teaching as beneath the concerns of academics, the rising
importance of writing would seem to have made it an attractive study for those seeking to secure their
professional status in universities. Writing was central to the service mission of English departments,
but other aspects of professionalization also worked against the writing studies. According to Susan
Miller, writing was becoming not "just a way of preserving thinking for speech," but "a way of
thinking" (Rescuing the Subject 64). Distinctive modes of thinking were embodied in the methods
used by disciplines to compose their characteristic forms of expertise. Making disciplinary genres
compelling was a highly rhetorical process that had the potential to raise questions about ethics and
ethos, about appeals to emotions and values, and about what was reasonable. Rhetoric had long
provided categories for examining these processes, but just as fields of expertise were becoming
demarcated in complexly rhetorical ways, the study of rhetoric became relegated to marginal courses
with no professional standing. 80 While professionals depended upon their rhetorical mastery of expert
conventions, the tacit quality of professionalization worked to make the rhetorical dynamics of
disciplinary conventions transparent. As David Russell has discussed, the rhetorical challenges
involved in composing disciplinary conventions come to the fore with practical force in the classroom.
Teaching and writing are part of the intimate workings of reproducing a discipline, and one of the
operating assumptions of such systems is that it is unprofessional to discuss reproduction in public.
This assumption helps to explain why in an era when most graduate students were becoming not
scientists or critics but educators, work with education was systematically ignored in ways that were
78
As examples of the credentialing of expertise that was a key element of the professionalization of
middle-class work between 1870 and 1900, Bledstein cites these statistics: certified nurses increased eleven
hundred percent, veterinarians eight fold, engineers six times, architects five, and dentists four fold (39; see also
Bender).
79
At the end of the era surveyed in this chapter, 1940, women made up 98% of nurses, 90% of
librarians, 75% of teachers, and 64% of social workers. Women comprised 26.6% of college teachers and
professors, as compared to 4.6% of doctors and 2.4% of lawyers and judges. Women were also 32% of
professional writers and 25% of journalists and editors (Adams, A Group of Their Own 155).
80
As Russell discusses, "the systematic teaching of rhetoric as public discourse—the heart of the
classical liberal arts curriculum for centuries—almost passed out of the curriculum entirely." With it went the
emphasis on debate and other "mechanisms for guided revision, public presentation to the academic community
and extracurricular reinforcement." These structures were replaced by a "system with no formal means of
guiding revision, no formal cooperation among faculty, and few opportunities for public presentation or
extracurricular reinforcement" (15, 46).
77
particularly debilitating for college English because of its expansive base and strategic role in
regulating access to higher education.
Writing and teaching are fundamental to how any academic discipline articulates its
distinctive expertise, but they are doubly important within English studies. Like other academics,
English professors write and teach, but they also teach writing. This role is a central to the expansive
articulation apparatus of college English studies.81 As a subject that is concerned with acquiring and
exercising literacy at all levels of education, English studies are vital to assessment and teacher
training. Into the twentieth century, English departments were also broadly involved in preparing
people to write for the popular press and speak to public audiences. Like most disciplines, at the
beginning of the twentieth century English studies began to elaborate its professional apparatus by
establishing graduate programs and professional journals. However, the professional structure English
studies came to assume worked to undercut the broader engagements of the discipline. Journalists and
other teachers of public address left departments of English as they came to specialize in literary
studies. These departures limited the discipline’s ability to articulate its values to the public. Writing
for public audiences would be further incapacitated by the disabling dualism of technical and creative
writing. The former became concerned with writing for work, while the latter came to exclude
journalistic writing, and both were marginalized by the professional hierarchies that dismissed writing
for general audiences. These divisions were compounded by the devaluation of English professor’s
expansive work in general education. These restrictions undercut the learning capacities and political
influence of the rising profession. Practitioners were discouraged from seeing themselves as teachers
and writers who are involved in local communities and institutions in the ways antebellum academics
were. To reassess the broader potentials of the work that got left out of the profession’s sense of its
mission, I want to consider how our discipline was organized in ways that failed to value its own
work. Our discipline has suffered more than most from the failure of professors to help professionalize
teaching, and the progressive era provides us with a powerful case in point for reflecting upon how
broader social movements can be advanced by building coalitions with other educators.
To explore the broader historical capacities of our field of work, I will bring together histories
of teacher education, literature, linguistics, and writing courses—including composition, journalism,
and creative and technical writing courses. I will begin with collaborations of professors and teachers
on entrance exams, which provided an historic opportunity for the discipline to articulate its values to
the public. The articulation apparatus of the discipline also included entrance requirements, and the
failure of English departments to attend to that work compounded the tendency of assessment
measures to reduce the functions of literacy to mere formalities. After considering how such formalist
tendencies shaped the teaching of literature as well as assessment-driven courses in composition, I
take note of other junctures where the profession articulated the values of its work, including a survey
of twenty English departments in 1894 that was published in the literary magazine The Dial. The
concentration of English studies on a modern conception of literature was already working to exclude
journalism, speech, and linguistics. The potentials of broader conceptions of literacy studies become
evident when we look past the centers of the profession to the colleges that offered access to women,
workers, and people of color, in part because of the demand for teachers and writers. The possibilities
posed by this development are evident in the progressive movement that had a broad impact on high
school English courses and general education, and almost no impact above them.82 The challenges of
teaching the less literate to read with refinement contributed to the rise of the New Criticism, but New
81
Articulation is most commonly used in education for the programs in which colleges and schools
confer on courses and the transfer credits. These articulation arrangements sometimes include conferences and
publications that involve collaborations among professors and teachers. I will discuss the history of these
partnerships in terms that draw upon a conception of articulation as a process of communicating to outsiders at
critical junctures where a group or institution formalizes what it is about to those who are being subjected to its
distinctive modes of expression and interaction (see Hall, “On Postmodernism” 53).
82
A standard account of the progressive movement in education is Cremin’s The Transformation of the
School: Progressivism in American Education, 1876-1957. Progressivism was criticized by traditional academics
for promoting student-centered approaches that undermined academic disciplines, and it has also been criticized
for looking to social scientists and managerial expertise to check the excesses of capitalism (see, for example,
Berlin’s Rhetoric and Reality).
78
Critics opposed themselves to the vulgarity of the popular culture and progressive “educationalists.”
That opposition strengthened some of the disabling hierarchies that came to structure the profession.
Articulating the Cost of Admissions
Most historians agree that admissions exams were used to demonstrate the deficiencies that
composition requirements were instituted to fix, and that those requirements provided the institutional
base upon which English departments were built. As a result of its association with entrance exams,
composition has often been consigned to a gatekeeper role. Identifying composition with this function
has served to distance such general education courses from the higher purposes of literary studies,
even though they have depended upon it, not just institutionally but ideologically. From a critical
distance, English professors can ostracize the instrumental role of composition without having to
reflect upon how their own position has been shaped by work with students seeking professional
advancement. Students who failed an entrance exam were often placed into a special writing class to
teach them to acknowledge their limitations.83 Such examinations and courses articulated the values of
literature and literacy to populations who would never be admitted to elite colleges, as becomes
evident when one considers the impact of entrance exams on high school curricula. Efforts to raise
college standards in the progressive era tended to focus on entrance exams as part of an effort to
download writing instruction on schools. Such efforts are doomed to fail because writing in college is
integral to learning in college, and the only way to presume that college writing can be taught in high
school is to reduce writing to a set of basic skills. Rather than focusing on how these attitudes are
articulated through writing examinations, I will focus in this section on the use of literature in college
entrance exams. Those uses undermined the standing of literary studies in many of the same ways that
instituting composition as an assessment-driven discipline did.
English literature was constituted as an object of formal study in the admissions exams at
Harvard that provide the best-known benchmarks for considering how colleges articulated what was
required from those who sought to join the educated classes. Harvard stated its plans to assess the
speech of entering students in its Catalogue for 1865-66, and then in 1870 Harvard shifted to testing
not speech but literacy with examinations on the "critical" and linguistic elements in designated works
by Shakespeare and Milton. In the Catalogue for 1872-73, the criteria were spelled out to emphasize
mechanics, and the next year compositions were set on a longer list of literary works—three
Shakespearean plays, the Vicar of Wakefield, Ivanhoe, and the Lay of the Last Minstrel. Literature was
initially articulated not so much a subject to be examined but as a means to examine whether students
had the "the style of a straightforward gentleman,” as Harvard professor Le Baron Briggs explained it
(rptd. Brereton 61). In "The Harvard Admission Examination in English,” Briggs complained that
naïve students always felt the crude "necessity of infusing morality" into literary works. Briggs
haughtily noted that the moralistic tone of one student's essay marked him out for severe "lashing"
because "if there is one thing that Harvard College will not tolerate, it is 'gush,'—‘gush' in general, and
moral or oratorical 'gush' in particular" (rptd. Brereton 69). Examinations of students' character
focused on stylistic proprieties until the 1890s, when a battery of tests included an exam on "literary
form" and another on general topics drawn from a longer list of literary texts (Brereton 33-37).
Because Harvard and other colleges canonized different works of literature, such reading lists
presented problems for teachers preparing students for colleges. This problem brought teachers and
professors together to deliberate upon what students should be reading and how they should be
writing. In 1893 these discussions led to the most influential articulation effort in American history,
the Committee of Ten. Under the leadership of President Eliot of Harvard, the Committee was set up
by the National Educational Association with nine disciplinary subcommittees charged with look
pasting admission exams to map out high school curricula. The subcommittees worked from the
A poignant counterpoint to professors' characterizations of students’ illiteracies is provided by the
paper that Woolley cites as an example of the essays produced by the fifteen to twenty percent of students who
were placed into basic writing at the University of Wisconsin (see Brereton 491-543 for similar examples):
My object in coming to the U. was to attain a higher knowledge of education. I wish to prepare my-self
for the difficulties and the environment of life. To fit my-self to be capable of mingling with educated
people and converse with them. Also to be able to understand their line of argumentation in their talk.
(240)
83
79
premise that all students should study in the same way as those going on to college, even though fewer
than ten percent did. The ten members of the English subcommittee included seven professors, most
notably its secretary, the Harvard Shakespearean George Kittredge. The subcommittee set out a
curriculum that devoted sixty percent of coursework to literature, thirty percent to composition, and
ten percent to rhetoric and grammar.84 Teachers were advised not to lecture on histories of literature
but to stress close readings of "Masterpieces" (Report of the Committee on Secondary Studies 90). The
Committee argued that students should write about literary works rather than commonplace themes
from daily life (94-95). According to Graff’s Professing Literature, the canonical texts and methods
set out by the Committee of Ten “not only gave definition to college English as a literary enterprise,
but compelled the secondary schools to conform to that definition” (99).
Examinations of literature tended to strip it down to formal elements that were easier to master
and measure, much as writing has often been reduced to mechanics in assessment-driven composition
courses. The Committee might have confronted the formalist tendencies of assessment if the
participants had attended to teachers' complaints that requiring lists of texts whose only connection
was that they were deemed to be literary made literature ahistorical and virtually unteachable. Articles
by teachers in journals such as Educational Review and magazines such as Harper's Monthly
Magazine provide a sense of the forums that were open to teachers and professors of English.
Professors with popular reputations such as Brander Matthews still wrote for magazines, and teachers’
contributions to such publications show that some had the expertise to join in deliberations upon the
"best methods of teaching English literature" (Pancoastt 133; see also Matthews). As discussed in such
articles, the lists of unrelated masterpieces set out by entrance requirements almost compelled "the
disconnected reading of books" by imposing a formalist approach that divorced texts from the contexts
that enabled a student to understand their historical and contemporary implications (Pancoast 136-37).
This isolation of texts from their interpretive contexts was compounded by requiring such classics as
Arnold's On Translating Homer that seemed irrelevant to students (see James Russell). Such criticisms
eventually dislodged reading lists from entrance exams, and thereby eliminated what could have been
an historic opportunity for teachers and professors to create cohesive and coherent programs of study.
If they had been supported by the profession, such collaborations might have yielded disciplinary
alternatives to the skills-based aptitude exams that would be marketed by testing experts and private
corporations. By distancing itself from such articulations, the profession “lost considerable power to
transform its professional values into public policy” (Trachsel 178).
Such developments were not inevitable. More sustained collaborations might have arisen out
of the articulation programs that were established before 1900 in forty-two institutions, mostly landgrant institutions in the Midwest and West (Christopher Lucas 154). In these accreditation programs,
faculty became involved in certifying schools after reviewing curricula, observing classes, and even
negotiating workloads with school boards. As in fact developed in other national educational systems,
these school-college partnerships offered professors strategic opportunities to shape public education
(see Hays). English professors at California and elsewhere published teacher manuals such as Gayley
and Bradley's Suggestions to Teachers of English in the Secondary Schools that articulated the
methods and values of the discipline to broader audiences. The spread of such efforts led to the
creation of the North Central Association in 1895. Disciplinary faculty such as Fred Newton Scott
helped organize the agency and spoke for its "organic" collaborations as a less hierarchical alternative
to the reading lists that Scott felt had been dictated in a "feudal" manner by private colleges in the East
(qtd. in Stewart and Stewart 48).85 Scott repeatedly called upon professors to work with teachers.
84
Most accounts agree that these recommendations helped establish the curricular preeminence of
English studies, and to concentrate those studies on literature. Fitzgerald has even maintained that "English had
no coherent subject matter" before the curricular debates over college entrance requirements (438).
85
Scott spent his career at the University of Michigan, where he worked with John Dewey for a time.
After graduating and joining the faculty in 1899, he set up a separate Department of Rhetoric in 1903 that
included journalism. Scott was president of MLA in 1907, and he became the founding president of the NCTE in
1911. He did not confine himself to working within the discipline, for he also served as president of the North
Central Association, the American Association of Colleges and Secondary Schools, and the American
Association of Teachers of Journalism. His department produced twenty-three PhDs, including such reformers as
Gertrude Buck, Sterling Leonard, and Charles Fries. At the instigation of Harvard-trained professors of literature
80
Unfortunately, rapid rises in enrollments put intense pressure on articulation, and research universities
generally failed to value such service duties, even in departments of education.86 "Content" faculty
were freed to divorce their sense of purpose from their broader educational duties. Articulation became
the responsibility of professors of education, who were pressed by their peripheral positions and
expansive obligations to be as practical as possible, which in practice meant concentrating on
"methods" courses that were often as isolated from “content” disciplines as mechanics-driven
composition courses tended to be.87
The dismissal of teacher preparation consolidated the structure of disciplines as national
organizations with marginal obligations to local institutions. The collaborations with teachers that
continued often used the Committee of Ten Report as a point of departure. According to a foreign
observer in 1895, the report had “for America the importance of an official pedagogy, scientifically
progressive and professional" (rptd. in Sol Cohen 970). Progressive, professional and scientific were
complexly related terms that shaped the institutional and ideological grounds upon which English
departments were built. The definition of high schools by their preparatory function provoked
opposition from progressive coalitions of administrators and professors of education, who maintained
that the Committee of Ten’s failure to attend to students’ experiences led to its elitist conclusions.
These divisive conflicts among disciplinary specialists and professional educators had even broader
impact than the exams themselves according to Krug and to Apel and Mirel. A leading scientific
spokesman for the professional educators was the psychologist G. Stanley Hall, a founding figure in
research on childhood development who had a formative influence on his student John Dewey.
According to Hall (1905), the Committee of Ten was "almost an unmitigated curse to high schools"
because it had ignored differences in individual development (rptd. in Sol Cohen). Building on his
work with the Committee of Ten, Eliot in 1900 helped establish the College Entrance Examination
Board.88 If the discipline had become more broadly involved in addressing teachers and professors'
shared needs to articulate the values of what they taught, these collaborations could have had a more
positive impact on the public education system. What emerged instead was an educational corporation
that capitalized on this public need. While tests of basic skills discounted the practical values of
literacy studies, such examinations also limited the social functions of literary studies by shrouding
them in formalist presuppositions.89
At its founding in 1883, the Modern Language Association did include discussions of
teaching, though one of the common aims was to shift skills instruction onto schools.90 Most of the
and against the wishes of its faculty, the Department of Rhetoric was reabsorbed into English at Scott's
retirement in 1926, much as Michigan’s Composition Board was just over a half century later.
86
Loaz Johnson documents how this accreditation system evolved into California's English A program,
which grew from sixteen to one-hundred-and-sixteen schools between 1888 and 1900. This articulation program
was initially about more than entrance exams. In 1900, only 479 out of 521 entering students were admitted by
certificate rather than exam. The essay topics that Johnson includes from English A exams emphasize formal
English usage and culturally sensitive topics that would have excluded students from more diverse linguistic and
cultural backgrounds. (For sample essays from the 1920s, see Brereton 528-35).
87
In “Pedagogy as a University Discipline,” Dewey responded by arguing that reducing the preparation
of teachers to methods courses divorced teaching from the social purposes it served by eliminating coursework
in theories of education, history, psychology, and sociology.
88
The first CEEB examination “was essentially designed to measure achievement in the subject of
English literature” but the exams eventually gave up essays on literature as too subjective (Trachsel 78).
89
The effect of assessment measures on literary studies is examined in Ohmann's critique of how AP
tests restrict the capacities of both students and literature by concentrating assessments on how well students can
abstract from their felt responses with formalist categories devoid of social purpose (English in America 57).
90
A "Professor of English Literature" at Central High School in Philadelphia published the first article
on American literature in PMLA. Smyth's "American Literature in the Class-room" provides a good example of
how the challenges of general education gave rise to an interest in teaching literature as literature (rather than
philology or history). Despite the involvement of such teachers, the MLA had a more restricted membership than
other disciplinary associations such as the American Historical Association. While only one quarter of the
AHA's original membership were academics, over three quarters of MLA members were, and that percentage
increased as the group narrowed its purposes and ignored outreach, unlike the AHA (Veysey 70). Such
differences show how our field was professionalized in ways that made it less accessible to teachers and writers.
81
articles in the first volume of PMLA were actually on pedagogy. Some contributors did not have PhDs,
and others held professorships that bridged diverging areas of study such as "Rhetoric and the English
Language." These articles examined how to disarticulate the discipline’s research agenda from its
broad educational duties. Such articles as Hunt's "The Place of English in the College Curriculum" set
out the discipline as "an intellectual study for serious workers" and not just a "desultory" pastime for
"leisure hours." According to Hunt, "in this day of specialties," the discipline needed to develop
rigorous "philosophic and critical methods." Such methods would force out practitioners with only "a
general society knowledge of the literature," and "efficient" teachers could then be tasked with
teaching composition (40-47). These articles generally opposed literary studies to the methods of both
science and rhetoric (see Easton, Garnett). According to James Morgan Hart's "The College Course in
English Literature, How it may be Improved," philology was worthy of research, and rhetoric might be
useful in composition (which was deemed to be a pre-collegiate study). However, "the proper object of
literary study is to train us to read, to grasp an author's personality in all its bearings. And the less
rhetoric here, the better" (35). Unsullied by rhetoric, literature was set out as an ennobling study of
masterworks of the imagination. By instilling the tastes of the "aristocracy" in the "bourgeoisie," such
histories of "the cultured classes" would help the educated appreciate the virtues of well-ordered
subordination (Hart 91; Shumway 36).
PMLA ceased publishing on pedagogical topics around 1903, when the MLA closed down its
Pedagogical Section. Under the leadership of Scott, the Section had surveyed members of what should
be included in graduate studies in rhetoric, how writing should be taught, and what purposes were to
be served by such teaching (rptd. Brereton 186-233). The "unusual if not alarming energy" that was
noted in the Pedagogical Section just before it was closed down suggests that some members were
energized by questioning disciplinary assumptions, while others were alarmed by such questions (rptd.
in Brereton 187). As one noted, the "business" of composition was not really part of "veritable
authorship," which "is something far higher, something of an altogether different order. I am unable to
define it, but I know it when it comes across my path" (rptd. in Brereton 231). Because such "higher"
truths could not be openly stated in practical terms, they were better left to the imagination. The
Pedagogical Section was closed down as the MLA revised its stated purpose from "the study of the
Modern Languages" to the "the study of the Modern Languages and their Literatures through the
publication of the results of investigations," and then in 1916 to simply "research" (see Wallace
Douglas). The movement of MLA away from discussions of the institutional work of the discipline
left a wide range of concerns unaddressed.
These problems led to the organization of the National Council of Teachers of English in 1911
(with Scott as President). NCTE was organized to address two related problems: the unprofessional
workloads imposed on basic literacy courses and the dominance of secondary curricula by the literary
works set by entrance requirements. Workloads were the first item of business at the first conference
and in the first issue of the organization's English Journal, but NCTE really began with the English
Round Table set up by the National Education Association to "protest" the impositions of the College
Entrance Examination Board (Hosic 102). From his work as Chairman of the NEA Round Table,
James Hosic published English Problems in 1912, and the report was excerpted in English Journal
that same year. Hosic and his collaborators were concerned that college entrance exams restricted the
broader purposes of high schools, especially since the tests concentrated on a narrow set of skills and
texts that were imposed on teachers who taught a wide range of students. Criticisms of entrance
requirements and debates over how to address the overwhelming workloads of teachers of writing
were a mainstay of the first NCTE conventions, with much of guiding terminology drawn from the
Progressive educational movement of the time. Teachers were struggling to negotiate institutional
pressures to concentrate on utilitarian applications and expressed concerns that instruction was moving
away from "culture and toward mere vocation" (College and High School Section 55). By supporting
these important discussions, the NCTE was serving the purpose set out by its founders to provide a
"progressive" forum where teachers could develop their “class-consciousness” by deliberating upon
their shared methods and needs, especially workloads (“NCTE Proceedings” 38).
These deliberations provide a case study in the challenges involved in organizing the
profession to address the shared needs of teachers and professors of English. Scott had helped launch a
national study of working conditions in 1909 through the Midwestern division of the MLA after the
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Pedagogical Section was closed down. The first issue of English Journal began with a report on the
study undertaken by Edwin Hopkins and his committee entitled "Can Good Composition Teaching Be
Done under Present Conditions?" The answer was a resounding "no." The committee provided
statistics that demonstrate that the poor working conditions faced by most college and high school
English teachers have been fundamental to the profession since its founding. Hopkins's Report of the
Committee on the Labor and Cost of the Teaching of English was based on surveys of a thousand
college and high school teachers in thirty-three states. English teachers were found to teach more
students for less pay than other disciplines. College composition teachers typically had more than a
hundred students, resulting in continuous turnovers that left the least experienced with the most
demanding courses (Hopkins, Labor and Cost). The 1920s saw the onset of “mass higher education”
according to David Levine (39). Confronted with too many students with too many needs, Hopkins
and his NCTE collaborators tried to establish English as a “laboratory” subject founded on scientific
research on student learning that could be enlisted to persuade schools to reduce teachers’ workloads
(“Can Good Composition” 3). It is impossible to know what could have been achieved if the discipline
had devoted more of its institutional and intellectual resources to these collaborations.
Scott criticized efforts to make an "exact science" of teaching in “Efficiency for Efficiency’s
Sake, which was his Presidential Address of the North Central Association of Colleges and Secondary
Schools in 1914 (49), but in his Presidential Address at NCTE in 1912, he set out two questions that
mirrored the prevailing professional hierarchy: "The first is, How shall the efficiency of our teaching
of composition be tested or evaluated? The second is, How can we arouse and maintain in our students
a genuine interest in the English classics?" (“Our Problems” 2). By identifying literature as a higher
calling and writing as a basic skill to be tested, the profession made part of its work a mystery and the
rest merely methodical. From a cynical perspective, one could argue that the rising status of the
profession is evident in how it succeeded in placing its more laborious duties beneath its consideration.
By such a measure, the closing of the Pedagogical Section of the MLA was an important step in its
rise to become a scholarly organization. From a more pragmatic perspective, it can be seen that a
discipline loses the capacity to learn from and intervene in the work that it ignores. The learning
capacities of the discipline have been most critically overloaded in those areas where the heaviest
demands are placed upon it: at the borders of the field where it articulates its values to those learning
its uses. It is precisely in such areas where the pressures to be methodically efficient are strongest, as
evident in assessment-driven composition courses. The formalist tendencies of assessment restricted
the purposes of the discipline along with access to it. By reducing the cost of admissions to basic
skills, the discipline discounted its general education offerings and denied itself the chance to learn
from them in ways that could have been more equitable, and empowering.
Mapping out the Field of Work
Student generally major in engineering to become engineers, and most music majors hope to
become musicians, but English departments have been hesitant to specify what they make of students
ever since English majors were disarticulated from general education offerings. Even to ask what an
English major prepares students to do is to raise doubts about whether one understands what English
studies are about. Professional anxieties about the functions of English studies are evident in the first
survey of English majors, which was published in English in American Universities by Professors in
the English Departments of Twenty Representative Institutions in 1895. In the previous year the
Chicago periodical The Dial had published descriptions of curricula from around the country, and they
were then gathered into a volume by the magazine's editor, William Morton Payne. Payne was one of
the journalist critics who worked in the field until it became demarcated as an academic discipline.
Payne also surveyed the field in a companion anthology, American Literary Criticism in 1904. English
in American Universities is, according to Gerry Graff, "the single best source" on "the ideological
divisions" that structured the discipline, which were handled with an "unexpectedly high degree of
sophistication" (Professing 101). The discipline was assuming a literary orientation that was becoming
disarticulated from philological studies, most commonly in historical surveys oriented to teaching
"literature as literature, with true aesthetic discernment of its spiritual quality" (Payne 124). Some
departments were already confining writing instruction to first-year courses, and others had raised
admissions standards to download such duties onto schools. The varied stances set out by the
83
departments that Payne surveyed document the range of possibilities that confronted the discipline—
and the forms and forces that were coming to contain them.
In his introduction to the collection, Payne reviews how the reading public had become
interested in college English studies as a result of the Committee of Ten and Harvard Reports on
Composition and Rhetoric that gave "the reform movement its strongest impulse" (12). That
“movement” had advanced to the point where "the teaching of English" was becoming equated with
"the teaching of English literature.” Matthew Arnold was the lead figure in that equation, and J.S. Mill
was factored in to divide literary studies from utilitarian concerns (8). Such calculations set
composition off as a service function and treated rhetoric as an anachronism. Language studies were
also viewed as a distraction from the "kindling of the soul" that makes "literature a personal message
to the individual" (9). These assessments shaped curricula in varied ways, as can be seen in the
descriptions that range from three to eleven pages. Respondents also provided details on staffing,
course offerings, and institutional constraints and purposes. The sample includes "venerable Eastern
institutions," "small colleges" (including a women's college, Wellesley, with the only female
respondent in the sample), and the "state-supported institutions of the New West." State universities
were perceived by Payne to be the most innovative precisely because they had to work with "cruder
material" (22-23). For their part, contributors from more broadly based departments often apologized
for the limitations of their efforts to imitate more prestigious universities, and blamed their limitations
on the provincialism of their students. Just as Le Baron Briggs complained about naive students'
tendency to moralize over literature, several respondents attributed their curricular shortcomings to
their having to spend time correcting students' language and character, particularly their crude
tendencies to read literary texts as morality plays.
As such responses suggest, English professors were intent on articulating a less didactic and
more professional sense of purpose, with efforts to professionalize the discipline working in tandem
with students’ efforts to professionalize themselves. Philological and literary studies competed for
priority in graduate and undergraduate curricula in ways that set out diverging trajectories for the
discipline. Like many of his contributors, Payne opposed the "intrusion of science upon a domain set
apart for other, if not higher, purposes" (20). According to Payne, the methods of linguistics had
become well established, but "aesthetic criticism" was still in a state of comparative "anarchy."
Nonetheless, neither "the science of linguistics nor the art of rhetoric" could any longer "masquerade
as the study of literature," and they might be better off in separate departments, as was being instituted
in departments ranging from Columbia to Stanford (26-27). According to Graff, "humanistic
moralists" were at the time joining forces with "aesthetic formalists" to set out the agenda for studying
literature as literature, with "much of the program of the latter-day New Criticism" already
"formulated by the mid nineties" (Professing 123).
As Graff and others have discussed, the methods of the New Criticism were shaped by trends
in general education, including the assessment pressures that worked to concentrate literacy instruction
on autonomous literary works (see also Applebee, Literature 55-65). As several contributors stressed,
"the study of literature means the study of literature, not of biography, not of literary history, . . . or
anything except the works themselves, viewed as their creators wrote them, viewed as art, as
transcripts of humanity" (96). A half dozen contributors took pride in noting that they taught texts not
textbooks. This approach had become possible with the cheap reprint series of the time, and it had
become necessary to instill discernment in students who lacked a shared history. The concentration on
literary criticism was also justified by the assumption that professors should lecture from their research
rather than having students recite commonplaces. Most of the curricula surveyed in Payne are
organized historically.91 While some professors still spoke of moral sentiments, others repudiated
preaching the "beauties of the poet's utterance" as a distraction from having students "systematically
approach the work as a work of art, find out the laws of its existence as such, . . . the meaning it has,
and the significance of that meaning" (Payne 96).
91
Survey courses were also found to be standard requirements in English majors in the broader sample
of one hundred English department curricula that Pohl surveyed in 1914. Pohl found that ninety-seven
institutions required survey courses in the first or second year, though anxieties were frequently expressed that
this historical approach did not adequately stress the close reading of individual works.
84
The need to establish an autonomous discipline distinct from the work of education helps to
explain why some of the most broadly appealing areas of literary study were given so little attention in
curricula. One might expect an emerging field to use popular interests to attract more practitioners, but
few contributors to English in American Universities considered students' interests or needs in setting
out programs of study. In fact students were often required to begin with the least accessible and most
difficult area of study—medieval philology. At the transition from rhetorical to literary studies in the
antebellum period, such studies had been enlisted to make English as rigorous as ancient languages by
such figures as Francis March at Lafayette College, as discussed in the last chapter. In his contribution
to English in American Universities, March took pride in how his department had become
internationally recognized for its philological emphasis, even though he acknowledged that few
students had much use for it (Payne 81). Emphasizing such inaccessible topics in gateway courses
served purposes more complex than simply limiting access or shoring up credibility. As with college
entrance requirements, beginning with rigorously methodological elements helped ensure that students
learned to distinguish the concerns of the discipline from the interests that attracted students to it.
After a semester tracing the etymological sources of a work of literature, students would have tacitly
understood that whether they enjoyed a book was irrelevant to how they were to read it.
While Payne praised the Committee of Ten for recommending that teachers have students
concentrate on close reading, he deferred to the "instructor's individuality" to answer practical
questions about how to teach students to read (16). Pedagogy is so routinely ignored in the
descriptions of curricula that any mention at all is noteworthy. Even when a contributor discusses
intended outcomes, as Martin Sampson did in describing the curriculum at the University of Indiana,
the prevailing assessment seems to be that "each instructor teaches as he pleases," or as Barrett
Wendell of Harvard noted "each teacher's best method is his own" (Payne 95, 48). Sampson ironically
notes that some professors fill “the student full of biography and literary history," while others merely
taught "literary parsing" or "the moral purposes of the poet or novelist; anything, in short, except
placing the student face to face with the work itself, and acting as his spectacles when his eyesight was
blurred" (Payne 95). As long as such differences were not subjected to critical inquiry, professors such
as Sampson could remain tacitly assured that "our ultimate object is the same.” Pedagogy was
discussed by one of the contributors who published on teaching, John Genung at Amherst. Genung set
out "workshop" methods that treated students' writing as literature in the making, as I will discuss in
the next section (Payne 112). Pedagogical methods were addressed by the contributor from the
University of Chicago, which offered a course on the teaching of composition that included rhetorical
theory and history, and a course in the "theory of literary teaching" was also offered at Nebraska,
where complaints were raised that students had neither "literary traditions or taste or training, or
interest in pure literature" (126).
Of the twenty institutions included in English in American Universities, only Harvard,
Amherst, and Michigan had composition programs with any standing, and even at Amherst, Genung
had to acknowledge that first-year composition was taught by "incompetent and inexperienced
teachers" (Payne 111). At Michigan and other institutions with a separate composition program that
reported enrollments in detail, fewer faculty and more instructors taught more students than in other
areas of English studies, where the loads were as low as six or eight classroom hours per week. The
contributor from one of the institutions with the lowest teaching loads detailed how they had been
achieved. Melville Anderson from the newly established Leland Stanford University discussed how
admissions standards had been raised to reduce the "inundation of Freshman themes" that had
threatened to sweep away "all the literary courses" (Payne 52). An exchange between the contributors
from Stanford and Berkeley over who had instituted higher admissions requirements provides a telling
example of how such issues defined the standing of departments, and through them their institutions.92
Universities such as California that adopted the certification system also wanted to raise their standing,
Another professor from Stanford, H.B. Lathrop, publicized his department’s efforts to restrict access
in an article in Educational Review in 1893. Professors had reportedly separated literature from composition,
"the most appalling drudgery of a drudging profession," by implementing a separate writing exam, requiring
failing students to pay for their own remediation, and following up with repeated writing tests to force out less
literate students (23:293). Such efforts succeeded. Within two decades, Stanford had become an elite national
university, with the highest faculty salaries and the second highest tuition in the country (Burke 225).
92
85
but by working with rather than away from public schools. Another example is provided by the
University of Nebraska, which worked with fifty-five certified schools to give advanced placement
credit for surveys of literature.
The composition program at Harvard provided the exception that improved the rule by
showing the profession what happened to men of letters who devoted their careers to paper grading.93
As Katherine Adams has discussed, and Brereton has documented, Harvard had one of the most
extensive writing programs in the country, but it was already positioned as a service unit. According to
Wendell Berry's contribution to English in American Universities (which is excerpted in Brereton),
more than half of English enrollments were in composition, as seems to have been the case in the other
institutions that provided detailed enrollments. Then as now, composition was largely taught by
paraprofessional instructors. While Hill was a founder of the Associated Press, his journalistic
background gained him little credibility in the English department at Harvard, for he and his
colleagues in composition had to work longer to be promoted (see Simmons). According to Graff,
such professors carried on the gentleman amateur tradition of Harvard literati such as Longfellow and
Lowell, meaning that they wrote for broader and less scholarly audiences (Professing 87). Hill and
others who taught in the program published influential textbooks, and also introduced creative writing
workshops that were imitated at Iowa and elsewhere. Such creative writing courses became a common
part of composition offerings in the following decades. At Harvard as elsewhere, advanced writing
courses developed out of the forensics programs that had required students to deliver orations to the
assembled college.94 From its move to the first year in 1885, a theme writing course dominated by
mechanical concerns was the base of the program. Harvard's version of composition was famous for
emphasizing impromptu themes drawn from daily life that were meant to imitate how journalists
learned to write from writing on the job.
Such teaching duties carried little prestige and a lot of work. Even a national leader such as
Scott complained of the "Sisyphean labors" of grading 3000 essays a year, with many written
"crudely, some execrably" (Payne 120). In his contribution to English in American Universities, Scott
acknowledged that students needed the individual attention that he felt Channing's generation had been
able to provide, but "now the hungry generations tread us down" (Payne 122). Faced with too many
students with too many problems, the profession understandably chose to divert its focus to higher
purposes. If it had concentrated on such basic problems, as many a teacher selflessly did, the discipline
would not likely have gained much respect even if it had succeeded at overcoming them. Writing and
reading were generally seen to be rudimentary skills that were always in need of repair, meaning that
teachers could gain little recognition even if they succeeded at the impossible task of fixing them to
the public’s satisfaction. In any case, the challenges of gaining professional standing for work with
literacy were not confined to composition, and they were only compounded by dismissing them there
because the leadership of the profession became divorced from the work of practitioners.
How Work with Literacy Became Isolated from Language Studies and Public Discourse
Questions about teaching did not go unanswered so much as unasked, at least among those
who looked to MLA rather than NCTE as the center of the profession. This failure to attend to the
basic work of the profession is understandable given the quite different opportunities facing teachers
and researchers. From the origins of English departments, composition has been consigned to
"temporary" instructors—lecturers, junior faculty, female instructors, and graduate students who were
93
The unusual emphasis given to composition at Harvard seems to have been pressed on the faculty by
outside forces. Reforms were supported by the Board of Overseers, an alumni committee that was very active in
shaping curricula. This committee was quite interested in the "Department of Written English," as the Board
referred to the English department in its minutes for May 27, 1885, when it made one of its many
recommendations on course offerings and modes of instruction.
94
Writing across the curriculum requirements tried to fill the void created by the disappearance of
forensic programs, which had required students to deliver compositions almost every semester in their careers as
late as the 1860s, but which had largely disappeared a half century later according to Wozniak's study of thirtyseven Eastern colleges. Russell reported that he found the same development in a dozen Midwestern institutions.
86
95
assigned heavier loads at lower pay. The temping out of composition shaped the development of the
whole discipline because composition has been the largest area of work in English departments since
they were built upon it. This professional pyramid freed scholars from worrying about teaching, and
left teachers with little time to worry about anything else. The "creation of the underclass" of
composition instructors laid the foundation for the "profession of literature" (Connors 172; see also
Susan Miller Textual Carnivals). Professors assumed that they would not have to teach writing if
school teachers did their job. Introductory courses in literature as well as composition would be
eliminated by raising standards to force high schools to do general education (see Hughes). By
mirroring the attitudes of careerist students that general education was a waste of time for
professionals, English professors subordinated liberal to professional education in ways that undercut
their institutional work.
William Lyon Phelps was one of the best known proponents of the idea that it was a "hideous
waste" of expertise to assign a man who had studied at an institution such as Harvard "to correct
spelling, grammar, paragraphing," a job at which "any primary school-ma'am would probably have
been more efficient" (rptd. in Graff and Warner 160). After graduate studies at Harvard, Phelps spent a
year correcting some eight hundred themes a week before leaving Harvard to join the faculty at Yale
in 1892. Yale resisted public calls to require composition, and Phelps gained national attention when
he claimed that Yale’s students wrote better than Harvard’s without having been taught composition.
Phelps's criticisms were especially damning because he taught at the leading institutions on both sides
of the "composition question," and he was known for his teaching, especially his famous Chautauqua
lectures. He took pride in startling his students by lecturing in a conversational manner after observing
how the "icily contemptuous" style of his own professors took the joy out of the classroom. Ironically,
Phelps felt that his success as a teacher actually lessened his chances of promotion. He reported that he
was threatened with dismissal in 1895 for teaching the first modern novel course in America—not
because the course had failed but become its popularity was demeaning to an institution such as Yale.
At Yale, Lounsbury's philologically-oriented survey of literature served as an alternative to first-year
composition courses. Lounsbury haughtily noted that "there is but one way of keeping certain people
from writing wretchedly, and that is by keeping them from writing at all" (rptd. in Brereton 282).
Lounsbury and likeminded New Humanists such as Charles Osgood at Princeton dismissed calls in
"the popular press" to teach composition because they saw it as too "technical" and too concerned with
the "worship of 'the Average’" to be a "liberal study" (Lounsbury 264; Osgood 233, 235). Such
attitudes had a pervasive impact because faculty in elite institutions shaped the ethos of graduate
programs, and through them the curricula of public institutions of learning across the country.
Such faculty were taught to leave composition courses to be defined by handbooks, readers,
and exercise manuals that gave overworked teachers material that was easy to teach, though often
pointless to learn (see Connors Composition-Rhetoric, especially 232-40). This project had little place
for a civic sense of rhetoric concerned with debating public controversies. Faced with endless stacks of
papers, teachers were left to their own devices and came to view the civic purposes of rhetoric as a
footnote to the teaching of "exposition" as the model for academic discourse. A standard text for
teaching exposition for over forty years was Fulton's popular Expository Writing. According to Fulton,
the "dispassionate and unbiased" style of exposition could be enlivened by signs of "the writer's
personality," but the style of exposition was distinct from the rigor of the scientist and the passion of
the “reformer.” To master such differences, students were taught to model their thinking on the sort of
essays that Fulton's Expository Writing set as models: Arnold's "Racial Elements of English
Character," Brander Mathews' "Americanisms," and essays that applied evolutionary doctrines to
"Progress and Poverty" and "The Migration of the Races of Men."
William James's frequently anthologized "The Social Value of the College-Bred" encapsulates
how such courses helped aspiring professionals who were not well bred appear well read. James
advised students that a college education would help them distinguish themselves by the distinctions
they made. According to James, "as a class, we college graduates" must be able to distinguish
ourselves to serve as models for the less educated, and thereby ensure that "our" culture "has spreading
95
In the first decades of the twentieth century, the average faculty salary was about that of a “skilled
industrial worker” according to Christopher Lucas (197). Connors provides particular details on college
composition instructors’ salaries (199-200)
87
power" (rptd. in Fulton 30). The “spreading power” of James's essay is evident in the circulation of the
piece. It was first published in the popular McClure's Magazine, and then it was widely anthologized
to become a touchstone of the literate culture for students seeking access to that culture. James notes
that the distinctive functions of higher education were being appropriated by the very magazines that
circulated his essay because they had become a "popular university" with "new educational power."
As a Harvard don lecturing popular audiences on the virtues of the educated, James's essay provided
students with a model for how to distinguish themselves in a class that granted access to professional
advancement to those who could demonstrate their mastery of such distinctions.96
Expository essays presented students with a highly formalized but purportedly transparent set
of conventions that value self-restraint and impartiality. Yet even within such incapacitated forms lay
opportunities to articulate more integrated approaches to English studies. Some of these possibilities
are evident in John Genung’s textbooks, which represented rhetoric as "the constructive study of
literature"(140). In The Study of Rhetoric in College, Genung expanded literary studies to include not
just journalism but also students' essays, which were "to be treated not as school-boy task-work, but as
earnestly meant literature" (156). Genung is often identified as just another one of the textbook writers
who promoted “current-traditional rhetoric,” but rather than running students through exercise
routines, he promoted "laboratory" methods for literary study that at least in principle treated students
as authors. As an ordained minister and a German-trained PhD whose handwriting was so elegant that
it was reportedly used in the manufacture of typefaces, Genung marks the transition from antebellum
preachers of sentiment to credentialed critics of literature. From an oratorical sense of literature that
included journalism and composition, Genung held forth the possibility of viewing a student writer as
"an originator, not a mere absorber, of thought." Such possibilities arise whenever teachers of literacy
recognize that "other studies are something to know; this is something to do" (135). While that
"something" is often reduced to basic skills, the inability of such categories to encompass the
pragmatics of literacy is what gives work with them such power, and possibility.
While first-year composition courses were often overwhelmed by oppressive workloads and
debilitating purposes, some English departments developed wider programs of work with writing. In
the first decades of the twentieth century, some three hundred colleges developed writing majors or
minors. Creative writing courses were especially common in women's colleges according to Adams’s
A Group of Their Own, which provides a general history of advanced writing courses and an account
of the spread of creative writing workshops that significantly differs from Myers's analysis.97 Courses
in writing fiction, poetry, and journalism became a common supplement to literature and composition
offerings in many departments of English, and in the departments that were beginning to break off
from them. The Rhetoric Department that Scott established at Michigan in 1903 was one of the more
notable. Before being reabsorbed into English at his retirement in 1926, it developed the sort of
96
James's distinctions were in fact used for just this evaluative purpose in this essay prompt in an
Examination in Subject A at the University of California in 1932:
William James said: 'The best claim that a college education can possibly make on our respect. . . is
this: that it should help you to know a good man when you see him.'
What is meant by 'good man'? What are the advantages of being able to distinguish a good man from
one not so good? Of what practical value is the 'critical sense'? May one not develop the power to
discriminate without going to college? In what vocations would this ability be most useful? In what
sense is Professor James's statement most true?
Like questions on what students read or why they came to college, this question presented many miscues for
those less familiar with literate modes of decorum (see Brereton 491- 545 for samples of such essays). Such
students might assume that to "discriminate" was bad or that being a "good man" was a simple moral matter.
97
While their purpose was not to produce "professional story-tellers, or ready-made poets," poetry and
fiction workshops were a common part of the Harvard curriculum, most notably Wendell's “studio course,”
English 5 (Copeland and Rideout 35; see also Adams, A Group of Their Own 44). Harvard graduates spread
creative writing courses across the country, with a student of Wendell's introducing such workshops at Iowa
according to Adams. The "Technique of the Drama" workshop that George Pierce Baker began at Harvard in
1906 was another source for creative writing. After publishing several books, Baker was finally promoted to
professor, and he immediately turned to concentrate on his playwriting studio. Students did not receive credit for
the class because it was deemed to be too "technical." Such attitudes led Baker to move to Yale, where he
established the Yale Drama School in 1925 (see D.G. Myers 68; also Gray 427-30).
88
"vertical curricula" in writing that Crowley has called for, and which has recently reemerged in
independent writing programs and broadly based English departments (Crowley, Composition 263;
also Shamoon, et al. and O'Neill). Scott's department was the first to teach newspaper writing
according to Stewart and Stewart. Like most such programs, Scott's department was understaffed and
overloaded, offering fifteen courses that ranged from first-year composition through journalism
courses to seminars on rhetoric and the teaching of composition. (see Stewart “Harvard’s Influence”;
also Berlin, Rhetoric and Reality 55-56; Adams, Progressive Politics 65). Other notable programs
existed at Mount Holyoke, which offered a major in rhetoric and some of the first courses in
journalism, playwriting, and the teaching of rhetoric according to Wozniak (122-23).98 Such accounts
expand the picture provided by Payne's survey to show that as the discipline was narrowing its focus
to literature, some departments were developing courses in business and technical writing, newspaper
and magazine journalism, other forms of public address, and even English as a second language.
Journalism connected creative writing with what was taught in other composition courses—
until journalists left university English departments along with rhetoricians concerned with public
speaking. Already by 1893, a survey found separate speech departments and programs in fifty-two
institutions (Gray, Giles 423). A noted step in the growing independence of speech was taken in 1914,
when the organization that would become the Communications Association of America was founded
by seventeen members of the NCTE Public Speaking Section, with twelve of the seventeen coming
from large public universities in the Midwest (see Rarig and Greaves). The departure of rhetoricians
interested in public speaking further isolated those who remained in English departments. As speech
departments left the humanities to take up the methods of the social sciences, rhetoric became a
marginal concern on both sides of the modern divide between the arts and sciences.99 When journalism
followed the trajectory of speech, composition became confined to academic and personal forms of
writing with little sense of the genres that bridged the two domains. As Katherine Adams discusses,
journalism was generally seen as a trade by English professors, and then as now, those concerned with
creative writing sharply distinguish it from "mere" journalism. Some early journalism programs
offered writing courses for business and science according to Adams, but journalism departments soon
rose above such service duties and joined with other "content" disciplines in looking to English to
teach the formalities of writing (see Cunliffe). The departure of journalism and speech left
composition largely defined by such service duties, including business and technical writing courses
that were often even more formalistic and less respected than basic composition courses.
By distancing itself from journalism and composition, creative writing became something
more refined and less broadly engaged than what it might have become if more productive use had
been made of its potential to bridge literary and literacy studies. Some sense of what that might have
been is provided by D.G. Myers's argument that creative writing emerged to foster creative reading in
an effort to teach literature from a writer's point of view. In addition to its origins at Harvard, Myers
identifies creative writing with broader trends in progressive education. According to Myers, "creative
writing was first taught under its own name in the 1920s" in progressivists' reforms of junior high
98
Like teaching, journalism offered opportunities to women that were programmatically ignored by the
profession of literature. In her comments on the journalism course at Wellesley, Bates noted that they had
enabled Wellesley's graduates to gain jobs with newspapers and magazines—a major achievement given the
limited options facing female graduates (Payne 145). As Adams discusses, jobs for female journalists grew with
the explosion of readership: while only four monthly magazines had circulations of over one hundred thousand
in 1885, twenty years later over twenty magazines produced a total circulation of more than 5.5 million (71).
99
For an early attempt to institute Speech on a scientific basis, see Frost. Such frameworks displaced
rhetoric from its central role, as documented by Donald Smith’s study of the courses offered by 118 institutions:
1900-10
1910-20
1920-30
Courses
Public speaking
58
152
164
Interpretation
37
104
167
Rhetoric
195
36
7
Elocution
289
107
4
Oratory
148
152
44
The discipline's movement toward an interpretive stance was even more definitive than these statistics may
suggest, for oratory classes were "seldom performance courses" after 1920 (465).
89
100
schools, most notably by "the pioneer of creative writing," Hugh Mearns (187). Mearns studied at
Harvard with Wendell, Baker, and William James (who made him promise not to get a Ph.D.). Mearns
was recruited to teach in the laboratory school run by Columbia's Teachers College, with which
Dewey had been involved. In an era when Robert Frost clubs were helping to popularize creative
writing classes, Mearns gained a national reputation for promoting workshop methods in collections
such as the Progressive Education Association's Creative Expression, written by Gertrude Hartman.101
From such sources (which he often pointedly critiques), Myers argues that literature presents
distinctive pedagogical challenges because it represents "a fusion of knowledge and practice" that has
to be experienced to be understood (12). This "constructivist" approach to literary study is identified
by Myers as a humanistic alternative to our discipline's emphasis on formal analysis. Myers at points
strains to distance creative writing from composition in ways that suit current hierarchies better than
his historical sources, but he is right that a more holistic sense of knowledge in the making is needed
to bridge the opposition of interpretation and composition that has divided the discipline (9, 172).
Such divisions widened when the departure of journalism left composition and creative
writing with little in common (except students). The chasm that opened up between the two was
paralleled by the gaps in language studies left by linguists' movement to form an autonomous
discipline. Works on philology such as Lounsbury's History of the English Language had founded
English studies on the history of the Anglo-Saxon, with literature largely studied to document the
historical development of linguistic laws. Changes in language were understood to be imbedded in
broader cultural developments. However, philologists were generally not interested in pedagogy, and
teaching held even less interest to linguists. Such considerations generally become secondary when a
subject is defined as a rule-governed system, for then teaching and learning become merely a matter of
memorizing the rules. Linguistic formalism compounded this tendency. According to Matthews’
Grammatical Theory in the United States, linguistics is founded on the assumption that "the study of
formal relations can and should be separated from that of meaning" (3). As linguists worked to
establish a scientific footing their discipline, and critics set out to study literary texts as objects unto
themselves, literary and linguistic studies became defined in terms that had nothing to do with each
other. Professors of literature such as Brander Matthews rejected the idea that linguistics and literature
have “any necessary connection" because "one falls in the domain of science and the other in the
domain of art" (340). For their part, linguists responded that they would no longer be "subsidiary. . . to
the study of literature, or paired with it as 'the linguistic side' of philology," as Bloomfield proclaimed
in 1925 at the founding of the Linguistic Society of America, which drew more of its founding
members from English departments than any other discipline (“Why a Linguistic Society?” 4).
Andresen details how linguistics, English, and anthropology followed diverging "arcs of
development" in the first quarter of the last century (though linguistics departments did not appear
even in research universities until after the Second World War). Even before the establishment of
structuralism as the model for linguistics, the discipline was invested in what Andresen has
characterized as a "neogrammarian, mechanical conception of language" that divorced language
studies from social contexts and educational applications (37). The purposes and needs of language
users became irrelevant to the study of language, much as the popular motivations and uses of
literature became peripheral to its profession. The practical limitations of linguistic formalism are
evident in Bloomfield’s vision of how linguists' "professional consciousness" would serve the "public
interest" (“Why” 69). Bloomfield looked down on teachers who "do not know what language is, and
yet must teach it." However, when he turned to explain how making a science of language would
improve its teaching, he treats learning as a transparent process not worth examining (69). Ignoring
matters of intention, use, and meaning, Bloomfield discussed the acquisition of literacy as a process of
100
D.G. Myers cites some of the texts first used to teach creative writing: Cody's How to Write Fiction
(1895), Barrett's Short Story Writing (1898), Smith's The Writing of the Short Story (1902), Albright's Short
Story: Its Principles and Structure (1907), Hamilton's Materials and Methods of Fiction (1908), Esenwein's
Writing the Short Story (1908), Cross's Short Story (1914), and Neal's Short Stories in the Making (1914).
101
One of many cases where creative writing was cited as a means to teach creative reading is provided
by Chandler's "A Creative Approach to the Study of Literature" (1915). The workshop pedagogy of progressives
such as Mearns defined creative expression in Deweyean terms as a means to create a collaborative
understanding of experience.
90
rote mastery to be made more efficient through "purely formal exercises,” with pedagogical activities
such as storytelling dismissed because the "practical and cultural values of reading can play no part in
the elementary stages" (“Linguistics and Reading” 263-4). Bloomfield set out this formalist model
with all the certainty of a believer speaking to the faithful. He did not feel a need to cite any
educational research because "the facts which have been set forth" were obvious, at least to those who
understood language to be a self-enclosed system (264).
As linguists moved to the boundaries of the field and then beyond them (along with journalists
and rhetoricians working with public speaking), English studies lost contact with the anthropological
conceptions of culture that had been provided by philology, and would later reemerge with cultural
studies. Linguistics lost a broadly based institutional engagement with the pragmatic challenges that
language learners pose to language theories. These losses are evident in the absence of linguists from
the largest organization of teachers of language in North America, the National Council of Teachers of
English. In the 1920s, as linguists began setting out their own programs of research, NCTE's
Committee on Grammar Terminology carried on an incessant discussion of how to teach grammar. In
response to the overwhelming pressures on teachers to concentrate on syntactic proprieties, researchers
argued that teaching formal grammar apart from students' writing had little impact on it or them. The
few linguistically informed participants provide a sense of the educational impact that might have been
achieved if there had been a critical mass of pedagogically oriented linguistic researchers (Connors,
Composition-Rhetoric 156-70). Most notable were three of Scott's students: Gertrude Buck (who was
very involved with the NCTE grammar committees), Charles Fries (whose publications included The
Teaching of the English Language), and Sterling Leonard (whose most relevant work was his
posthumously published Current English Usage). Leonard's "How English Teachers Correct Papers"
was exactly the sort of linguistically informed and pedagogically oriented research that was sorely
needed by overworked teachers. Limited as it was, this sort of research could not hope to redress the
impact of prescriptive handbooks of grammar, which according to a survey in 1927 were the only
textbooks used in forty percent of Midwestern composition programs (Connors, Composition 147).
There is perhaps no starker indication of just how isolated the most commonly taught English
courses were than the fact that so many apparently had students read nothing more than a handbook of
syntactic conventions. National surveys show that most composition courses were staffed by teachers
who were "inexperienced, unfitted by nature for the work, ill-trained, and sometimes, in addition,
reluctant and disaffected" (Scott, Thomas, and Manchester 593). That was in 1918. As early as the
1890s teaching assistants had begun to be used to staff composition courses in universities, and at the
turn of the last century, such programs began to be led not by researchers on teaching writing but by
administrators whose scholarly interests lay elsewhere.102 Commentators estimated that most English
professors began their careers teaching first-year composition without having received any training for
"such utilitarian work" (J.M. Thomas 456). Professional groups such as The Committee on the Labor
and Cost of English Teaching repeatedly recommended the teaching loads that have been proposed for
almost a century now—sixty students per instructor (Hopkins, “Good Composition” 4). Connors has
argued that some of the more dubious practices in composition can be attributed to the heavy teaching
loads, including the emphasis on personal experience essays that could be proofread more efficiently
than those on sensitive political issues. Connors concludes that such practices have remained
impervious to critique simply because they work so efficiently, though the work they do is not really
to teach writing as a meaningful act, as Sharon Crowley and Susan Miller have argued. Many of the
problems confronted by composition teachers were worsened by their isolation from work in other
areas of the field. Insofar as the discipline did not prepare graduates to teach, did not support research
on teaching, and did not secure workloads that provided time for teachers to reflect upon their work,
college English adopted a disciplinary economy that reduced its learning capacity and public agency.
A broader perspective on the field may help us to reimagine its possibilities.
102
Connors has provided the most thorough account of the development of labor conditions in
composition (171-209), but they have also been critiqued by other leading histories of composition such as
Berlin’s Rhetoric and Reality (78-80) and Crowley’s Composition in the University (118-31). Brereton
concludes his collection of materials documenting the impact of these loads on students’ writing by reprinting
Taylor's National Survey of Conditions in Freshman English, which surveys how composition was left "to go
through its paces with cheap labor and mass production" (557).
91
The Pragmatics of Making a Difference
In this section I will reassess those possibilities by examining the disciplinary alternatives that
emerged at institutions that served students quite different from those attending a university such as
Harvard. The establishment of research as the chief distinction among classes of faculty and
institutions was not as inevitable as researchers tend to assume. The classification of higher education
institutions by research hierarchies has played into the tacit conservatism of professionalism by
reinforcing the tendencies of public universities to look up to elite institutions for models rather than
taking a broader accounting of their functions and potentials. Up to the middle of the twentieth
century, research universities largely served to prepare educators for other schools and colleges
because even in the sciences there was little demand for researchers as researchers until after the
Second World War.103 Research hierarchies provided a reward system that disoriented professors in
disciplines such as English from coming to terms with their broader work, which often differed
dramatically from how the field of study was represented in scholarly journals. As part of the most
broadly based discipline in the academy, English graduate programs were guided by professional
priorities that were especially ill suited to the possibilities that arose as higher education expanded to
include underrepresented groups, particularly the normal schools that were evolving into colleges. As
literature became defined by less didactic and more professional purposes, teaching largely remained
identified with character formation, which was understood to be women's work, and therefore
unworthy of professional attention. While the discipline has tended to define its history by the
professionalization of literary studies, it is the failure of teaching to achieve professional standing that
has had a more pervasive impact on practitioners, and on our students—especially those who come
from backgrounds that differ from those traditionally valorized by studies of the Anglo Saxon
character of English literature. Too often such students enter the field hoping to learn how to teach for
a living, and then graduate from it having seen it ignore both their traditions and their aspirations.
While professional spokesmen such as Phelps noted that it was a waste of expertise to assign
researchers with graduate degrees to teach introductory courses, most saw that as a problem in
teaching assignments and not graduate preparations. Some did perceive that graduates of research
institutions were not being prepared to teach in more accessible colleges. The most famous reaction
against the requirement of the PhD for college teaching jobs was William James's “The PhD Octopus.”
According to James, requiring PhDs for college teaching positions was merely a marketing ploy.
James's response resonates with Burke's research that the rise of research institutions was not simply
an effort to secure outside funding. Research funding was quite limited outside such areas as
agriculture until after World War II, while the cost of building research infrastructures was quite high.
The classification of colleges and universities by their research missions was integral to the market
logic of the American higher educational system. Before American universities and colleges were
ranked by their research funding, an emphasis on research helped universities distance themselves
from teaching institutions, and thereby compete for better classes of students. By distancing
themselves from teachers, professors were able to improve their professional standing, and this
professional hierarchy mirrored the tendency of the higher education market to dismiss teaching to
lower class institutions that served students who looked to teaching as an opportunity to advance
themselves.
These institutional economies gave rise to conflicted professional value systems, as can be
seen in the deliberations of the Pedagogy Committee of the MLA, and after it was closed, in Fred
Newton Scott’s work with the Central Division of MLA and then the NCTE. An editorial in the
second volume of the English Journal in 1913 signed F.N.S notes that PhDs are "as a rule elaborately
mistrained for the subject they are fated to teach" because they are "trained as if they were to lecture
on obscure problems of English literature to small groups of graduate students" (Editorial 456).104 One
103
In 1918, 300 industrial research laboratories employed some 1200 researchers in private corporations,
while in 1940 there were still only 27,000 people employed in 2300 such labs (David Levine 50).
104
In “English and the PhD” (1925), Harry Baker underlined that the shortcomings of the typical PhD
“are best shown by his often pathetic attempts to wrestle with the problem of teaching Freshman composition,”
which is “the standing joke of the American university,” in part because “the middle-aged doctors are not
required to teach it, and the young ones teach it badly” (qtd. in Connors 198).
92
of the projects that was begun in the Central Division of MLA in 1912 and then completed by the
NCTE was The Committee on the Preparation of College Teachers of English, which surveyed fiftytwo heads of graduate departments, eighty-seven college presidents, and one hundred and ninety
recent PhDs (with twenty eight, eighty seven, and one hundred and thirty five responding). Most of the
recent PhDs felt basic changes were needed. While department heads were more satisfied with the
status quo than college presidents, forty percent of the former and fifty percent of the latter agreed that
more attention to teaching was needed (“Report of the Committee”). Why then was it not instituted?
Models were being set out for how to prepare teachers in graduate programs. For example, in
an NCTE session in 1912 on "The Preparation of College Instructors in English," a Harvard
composition professor outlined a practicum that worked in tandem with first-year writing courses to
prepare graduate students to run workshops, respond to drafts, and conference with students, while
also improving their own writing (see Greenough, “Experiment”). One respondent from a small
college criticized the research orientation of graduate studies, and the other respondent from a
Midwestern university proposed needed changes in fellowships, hiring, and promotion criteria. This
session and other articles in English Journal show that people recognized that graduate programs
ignored most of the work of the field. As one article noted, "teaching is likely to be looked upon as an
avocation" that provides a scholar with "an opportunity to follow his vocation" (Cox 208).105 Given the
actual duties of professors, such conceptions of the work of the profession are rather curious.
Specialized publications aimed at other experts need not have become the only model for the scholarly
work of the discipline. In addition to the writings of professors of journalism and creative writing, the
articulation efforts of public universities had yielded publications on teaching, and other models were
put forward for applied scholarship that served to articulate the values and methods of literary and
literacy studies to broader audiences. In an article in English Journal in 1916, Noble outlined how to
teach graduate students to do research for literature courses, including writing introductions for
textbooks and other works aimed at general audiences. Rather than fostering specializations in minor
areas, this research agenda was explicitly intended to prepare graduate students to articulate the public
relevance of the humanities (670).
The clearest example of how the priorities of the profession disoriented practitioners from the
broader potentials of their field of work is provided by those colleges that were evolving from teaching
to research institutions. Much like college entrance exams, normal schools provided the discipline
with broad opportunities to articulate its methods and values to the rest of the educational system.
Following trends that began in the nineteenth century, "normals" were evolving from two-year to fouryear institutions. As noted in the last chapter, normal schools and teachers colleges opened up access
to women, people of color, laborers, and foreign-born students (see Burke 228). Normal schools were
instrumental in enabling high school teachers to earn college degrees, with up to ninety percent having
earned such degrees according to a national survey in 1915 (Baker, et al. 328). As they evolved into
state universities, the traditional purposes of teachers colleges came into conflict with their academic
aspirations (see Borrowman). The impact of these conflicts is detailed in Jewett's examination of the
development of English curricula in teachers colleges in the first quarter of the twentieth century.
Drawing on a survey of catalogues between 1900 and 1925, Jewett documents how the disciplinary
priorities of research institutions were imitated by colleges with broader purposes. Most courses came
to focus on literature. Instruction in rhetoric virtually disappeared as composition courses became
relentlessly practical, with courses in argument offered by fewer than twenty percent of the seventyone colleges in the 1925 sample (151-52). What Jewett found most problematic was the lack of
105
The double-bind facing those who were interested in teaching is clearly evident in Cox’s "What is the
Best Preparation for the College Teacher of English? Training for Teaching and Training for Research," which
was delivered at a regional MLA and then published in the English Journal in 1913. Cox recounted how PhDs
had begun to be hired at his institution (West Virginia University) to replace well-meaning generalists who
taught literature as a means to shape character. In an effort to improve his own professional standing, Cox
recounted how he had attended summer school at "one of our great universities." When he asked the head of the
department why teaching was ignored, he indignantly responded that a PhD "is not a teacher's degree but an
investigator's degree" (207). Cox found such an assessment dubious because the "lifework" of most graduates is
teaching, but to avoid being confused with professors of education, Cox quickly followed up to reassure his
readers that he deplored “the relative importance given to the subject of education in certain quarters" (213).
93
attention to preparing students to teach. Few methods courses were offered, and few course
descriptions even mentioned teaching. In Jewett's assessment, this inattention to students' professional
duties undermined the standing of the work of the field.
The alienation of the profession from the pedagogical processes involved in sustaining it is
evident in how teaching remained largely a mystical matter of character formation even after literature
began to be characterized in more professional terms. In the early PMLA issues that I have already
discussed, some of the advocates of the "aesthetic standpoint" discussed literature in moralistic
categories drawn from Ruskin and Arnold, but those modalities changed as the methods of study
became more specialized (see Fruit; also Graff, Professing Literature 81-118). Discussions of teaching
began in a similar modality with exhortations to serve as "ministers to the soul of the inner man" (Fruit
29). Distancing the teaching of literature from such oratorical exhortations was doubly difficult
because literature was traditionally identified with a didactic stance (and professors did after all teach
for a living). To avoid getting too explicit about teaching (and thereby sounding like educationalists),
professors often invoked the eloquence of the selfless teacher. Even as professors adopted the
professional personae of scholars and critics, even more progressive educators often continued to
characterize teaching as a calling "akin to the ministry" (Scott, “Undefended” 55).106
While the traditional tendency to represent professors of English as preachers of virtue still
shadowed how the values of literature were characterized, preaching and teaching had a broader
historical association that was complicated by several developments in this period. As detailed in
Burke’s study of the social backgrounds of faculty and students, teaching had replaced preaching as
the principal means for lower-class students to gain social status through education. At the same time,
such service work was traditionally understood to be women’s work, as social work had become in
sociology, counseling had become in psychology, and nursing had become in medicine. In part, these
disciplinary distinctions were a reaction to the fact that minorities, laborers, and women were entering
higher education in rising numbers, often to become teachers. Most Morrill Act institutions had
become coeducational by the last quarter of the nineteenth century. The highest concentrations of
women were often in teacher preparation departments, which contributed to a fifty percent increase in
the number of women in college in the last decade of the nineteenth century.107 According to
Williams's "The Intellectual Progress of Colored Women,” "thousands" of women of color were able
to gain an education in order to become educators: "it is almost literally true that, except teaching in
colored schools and menial work, colored women can find no employment in this free America" (rptd.
in Ritchie and Ronald 185). As Katherine Adams has discussed in A History of Professional Writing
Instruction in American Colleges, these professional choices expanded somewhat as the demand for
writers for print media increased. Those options had also begun to change with the Second Morrill Act
in 1890, which made specific provisions for funding African American institutions, though those
provisions had a vocational emphasis that dampened the development of more academic programs.
The opportunities open to students and teachers from marginalized backgrounds provide an
alternative historical frame of reference for considering how literacy and literacy studies developed in
the Progressive era. Some research has been done to expand our history from such universities as
Harvard to institutions such as Northeast Oklahoma State University, which evolved from
Northeastern State Normal School. That school had itself evolved from the Cherokee Female
Seminary that was founded by the tribe in 1857 to educate teachers in a curriculum modeled upon
Mount Holyoke Seminary. The "seminary" approach to English studies deemphasized political debates
in favor of a belletristic approach that was closer to Godley's Lady's Book than to the rhetorics that had
taught men to speak with power (see Ricks). If one looks past what was taught to what was learned,
one can move beyond viewing such instruction as merely indoctrination. As Mihesuah discusses in
106
Writings for teachers often retained an exhortative style, as evident in Chubb's popular The Teaching
of English and "The Blight of Literary Bookishness" in the English Journal in 1914. According to Chubb, "the
supreme aim of literary and linguistic training is the formation of character,” and teachers should see themselves
as "the radiant ideals of manhood and womanhood prefigured in Literature" (Teaching 380, 238).
107
The number of women in college rose from fifty-six to eighty-five thousand according to Kates, who
examines how the studies offered to women changed as the class backgrounds of female students expanded
beyond those served by such institutions as the “Seven Sisters” that were founded between 1865 and 1890—
Vassar, Smith, Wellesley, Radcliffe, Mount Holyoke, Barnard, and Bryn Mawr (see also Weidner and Harmon).
94
Cultivating the Rosebuds: The Education of Women at the Cherokee Female Seminary, 1851-1909, the
seminary gave thousands of Native American women the chance to learn how to earn a living through
education by writing for the college newspaper, speaking in literary societies, and organizing
themselves. Participating in literary and debating societies was particularly useful to students from
underrepresented backgrounds because they could gain experience speaking with others whose
backgrounds differed from those represented in English literature classes. Such groups provided
women and people of color with networks to sustain them when they graduated and sought to enter
professions that were often unresponsive if not openly hostile (see Adams, A Group of Their Own).
Even institutions that taught the same groups of students sometimes offered very different
learning experiences, as evident in the case studies of Radcliffe and Vassar by Simmons’s “Radcliffe
Responses to Harvard Rhetoric” and JoAnn Campbell’s account of Gertrude Buck’s teaching at
Vassar. Radcliffe students were originally taught by Harvard professors such as Barrett Wendell, who
combined a stifling emphasis on stylistic proprieties with a patronizing chauvinism that led him to
grade students on their "charmingly feminine" style (qtd. in Simmons 272). As Simmons details, some
students retreated to their journals to critique his "absurdly stiff way of thinking" (qtd. in Simmons
273). As one student wrote, first-year composition “does not teach us to write, it teaches us not write.
It is not a path to future composition courses; it is a stumbling block, over which most of us get so
bumped and battered & discouraged, that we let English class alone through college” (Simmons 279).
Students learned to make more productive use of their experience in the composition, literature, and
creative writing classes at Vassar (see Ricks). Drawing upon her studies with Scott and Dewey as well
as her experience in Baker's playwriting workshop at Harvard, Gertrude Buck and her colleagues
developed a pragmatic approach to rhetorics and poetics that treated creation and reception as
transactional processes. As evident in writings ranging from "Recent Tendencies in Teaching English
Composition" to The Social Criticism of Literature, Buck was a leading proponent of a pragmatic
philosophy of English studies that according to Campbell provided a "civic" alternative to formalist
approaches to composition and criticism (xli).
Campbell's collection includes Buck's scholarship, creative writing, and textbooks along with
institutional reports that document how the efforts of such committed teachers were limited by the
teaching loads that pressed teachers to confine themselves to the basics. The reports of Buck and her
chair and life partner, Laura Wylie, document how their department's creative initiatives were
overwhelmed by teaching loads of as many as seven courses a semester in the years that Buck taught
at Vassar from 1897 to 1922. Buck and her collaborators acknowledged that teaching composition
presented laborious challenges that made it difficult to offer specialized courses. Instead of responding
as professors at Stanford and other elite institutions did, Buck and Wylie persisted with a "laboratory"
approach that emphasized revisions and conferences, and they also engaged in articulations with
colleagues in high schools. Buck and her coworkers did research to show that they taught more
students at lower costs than other disciplines, but their requests for additional faculty were repeatedly
denied. Buck was able to sustain her outreach commitments by creating a noted community theater
group, but she was unable to continue the playwriting she did in Baker's workshop. Baker later
wondered what it must have meant to her to "put aside her own play writing, when she had had as
much success as that, and give out richly to the people who wanted to write" (qtd. in Campbell 159).
Buck's workload reportedly contributed to her early death in 1922. Such selfless devotion was
commonly expected from female teachers. Buck's uncommon vision provides a powerful example of
how prevailing attitudes undermined the professional capacity of English studies by imposing
workloads that left generations of female teachers with little time to write and thereby shape the
discipline’s sense of purpose.
The sort of alternatives that were lost to the discipline is evident in Susan Kates's account of
the "activist" approach to rhetorical and cultural studies that was developed by reformers in colleges
for women, people of color, and laborers. Kates provides three case studies: Mary August Jordan's
career at Smith College from 1884 to 1921, Hallie Quinn Brown's teaching at Wilberforce University
from 1893 to 1923, and a group of teachers at Brookwood Labor College from 1921 to 1937. Kates's
creative reconstruction defines this activist tradition by a shared commitment to replacing proscriptive
standards with an attention to how language differences embody social experiences. This critical
engagement with social experience was developed by assigning students to address the political
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problems of their particular social group in order to teach them how to speak to its needs. As Kates
notes, such an approach was consistent with progressive pedagogy and the integrally related reforms
of progressive journalists and activists. Central to this tradition in college English studies was a shared
vision of teaching literacy and literature as a means to civic engagement. That vision provided an
alternative to stressing stylistic proprieties and self-restraint. For example, Jordan wrote for popular
magazines and home instruction manuals as well as scholarly publications, and she drew upon
Lounsbury's descriptivist approach to linguistic change to challenge the emphasis on grammatical
niceties that restricted less educated people's opportunities to gain access to higher education, and
through it to positions of public authority. On these and other points, Jordan argued that women's
colleges should break from the dominant tradition: "Why insist upon sharing the wreck of educational
dogma? Why insist upon ranking as 'advantages' the under-inspiration of our over-examined young
men? . . . . The student's mind is a republic of powers not a receiving vault" (qtd. in Kates 31).
As Kates discusses, this alternative tradition developed a critical engagement with pedagogy
that was opposed to the prevailing disciplinary paradigm, which Kates identifies with Freire’s
conception of “banking” approaches to education. This critical stance on teaching and writing was
developed by figures with marginal standing in the profession who developed a practically situated
and politically engaged approach to teaching and writing. The values of literary studies were
articulated in terms that are virtually unrecognizable to the profession in works such as Victoria Earle
Matthews's "The Value of Race Literature.” As exemplified in such texts, women, workers, and
people of color sometimes sustained a more broadly engaged civic conception of literature, which
Matthews defined as "all the writings emanating from a distinct class," including more oratorical
genres such as "History, Biographies, Scientific Treatises, Sermons, Addresses, Novels, Poems, Books
of Travel, miscellaneous essays and the contributions to magazines and newspapers" (126). In contrast
with the concentration on aesthetic genres that emerged from the opposition of belletristic to utilitarian
values within the profession, Matthews identified literature with a very different class affiliation: not
with the learned or educated classes, but with the class with whom she identified as an African
American woman. Such class identifications are part of what got left out of literacy studies as they
came to concentrate on a modern conception of literature.
These figures and the broader progressive tradition provide an historical alternative for
assessing how literary studies came to be defined by middle-class professionalism. Figures such as
Brown and Matthews were community-based intellectuals. Like their predecessors in the antebellum
period, women and African-American teachers and writers depended for their income and identity on
networks of lyceums, magazines, and reform societies of the sort that educators had looked to before
professors came to locate their work within specialized disciplines (see Logan 20-1).108 These informal
educational networks were often more accessible to teachers and others with limited credentials than
professional associations, which often required intellectuals from marginalized backgrounds to give up
their identifications with their own communities in order to speak as experts. The difference between
what professions professed and provided to outsiders is set out in Martha Carey Thomas's "Should the
Higher Education of Women Differ from That of Men?" Thomas argued that colleges violated their
own professional values by admitting women to graduate study and then denying them college
teaching jobs. Critiques of middle-class professionalism became more pointed with the emergence of
labor colleges in the 1920s that drew upon their own networks of unions, workers' educational groups,
and radical periodicals. As Kates details, while such colleges were not free of sexism or racism, they
108
The dependence of female and minority writers and orators upon such networks is evident in Ritchie
and Ronald's collection, Available Means: An Anthology of Women's Rhetoric(s). As in the antebellum period,
virtually all the individuals included from the early twentieth century worked as teachers, with most moving
back and forth from classroom lecterns to other public forums, often supplementing their incomes by writing for
the increasing numbers of magazines and newspapers aimed at female, working-class, and minority readers. The
experience of Ida Wells provides a case in point. Upon the early death of her parents, she began teaching at
sixteen and then became active in her church and a teachers' lyceum, for which she edited a newsletter. When
she was fired for opposing segregation, she became "one of the first women investigative reporters in the United
States" and used her own Free Speech and Headlight and other progressive periodicals to investigate the
lynching of African Americans. Such efforts were also common among the progressivist women working as
social workers and teachers in settlement houses, women's groups, and expanding social service agencies.
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did offer a civic vision concerned with teaching students to use "the working class vernacular" to
address racial, gender, and class oppression.
These trends can be broadly identified with the progressive movement of the first decades of
the twentieth century. “Progressivism” served as a unifying but ill-defined ideology for coalition
building among educators, journalists, social workers, and activists who ranged from socialists to
reformers simply seeking to check the excesses of capitalism. However defined, the Progressive era
saw the most broadly based leftist politics in American history, with thirty-three cities with socialist
mayors in 1912, when almost a million voted for a socialist presidential candidate, and again two
decades later for socialist and communist presidential candidates (Leitch 3). The progressive
movement in education was closely identified with the work of John Dewey. In two hugely influential
books, Democracy and Education and Experience and Education, Dewey set out a philosophy of
education as a model for democracy. Dewey’s educational philosophy was integral to his vision of
democracy as a “way of life” characterized by collaborative inquiries into the potentials of experience.
To explore those potentials, students undertook collaborative projects that drew on varied disciplines
to address social issues and community needs. In opposition to the increasing specialization of
academic disciplines, progressives organized education not around subject areas but around students’
developmental levels and social experience. In some respects, progressive education attempted to
break out the routines of classroom instruction by looking back to the informal social networks that
had shaped learning and literacy before schooling became state mandated. In other respects,
progressive educators looked forward to the student-centered models of learning that gained
resurgence in the 1960s, and which played a vital role in the process movement in composition
studies. Within the context of the second quarter of the twentieth century, the progressive movement is
significant because it posed an historical alternative to the disciplinary professionalism that would
come to define college English studies. The distinctive methods and values of progressivism were
founded not on the mastery of an autonomous body of knowledge but on the collaborative work of
learning and teaching. Not surprisingly, progressivism was especially popular among those who
worked with teachers, particularly professors of education in state universities and normal schools. On
the other hand, progressive doctrines were often dismissed by “content” faculty, who felt threatened
by the lack of respect that was shown to their distinctive forms of disciplinary expertise.
These opposing responses unfortunately played into deepening divisions in college English
studies by providing a unifying ideology to those concerned with teaching, writing, and teacher
training—and a unifying point of opposition for those who looked down on them. The former group
looked to NCTE for models of the “experience curriculum” and the “project method,” and the latter
identified with MLA, where Dewey and progressives were often attacked for contributing to the
decline of the humanities in a commercial age. Humanists and social scientists were at the time
fighting a “border war” over whose expertise would hold sway in the literate public sphere (see
Elizabeth Wilson). One front in that conflict was over control of public schools. As discussed in the
last chapter, liberal arts proponents did not get very involved in that conflict, but losing it reinforced
their shared opposition to Dewey as a proponent of the expanding influence of the social sciences.
Dewey provoked such reactions by publishing popular articles arguing that “only the gradual replacing
of a literary by a scientific education can assure to man the progressive amelioration of his lot.”
Dewey’s “Science and Education” appeared in Scientific Monthly, sandwiched between articles on
synthetic rubber and genetics (55). Progressives were comfortable with such popular venues, as were
the courses they helped to popularize journalism and creative writing.
Progressives viewed creativity as part of everyday experience and expression, as Dewey
detailed in Art as Experience. Dewey argued that concentrating aesthetics on “works of art” creates a
“chasm between ordinary and aesthetic experience” that opens a gulf between artistic creation and
purposeful action (10-12). Dewey saw art not as an object but an experience. The artistic experience
was distinguished by a “degree of completeness” in the transactions among “sense, need, impulse and
action” (26, 25). On these and other points, Dewey set out an historic alternative to the conception of
literature that was being instituted in English departments. In opposition to that conception, Dewey
argued that “assuredly there is a lack of imagination implied in the current identification of the
humanities with literary masterpieces; for the humanism of today can be adequately expressed only in
a vision of the social possibilities of the intelligence and learning embodied in the great modern
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enterprises of business, law, medicine, education, farming, engineering, etc.” (156). Such doctrines
directly challenged New Critics’ efforts to demarcate literature as a specialized domain of aesthetic
experience. Dewey’s social-constructivist vision of the humanities was broadly consistent with the
disciplinary trends that emerged with the pragmatic turn in the 1990s, though his standpoint is
pointedly opposed to the positions staked out by the best known neo-pragmatist, Stanley Fish, as I will
discuss after reviewing the school of criticism that first instituted a modern sense of literature as a
discipline unto itself.
"Criticism, Inc."
While “the New Criticism” is usually used to refer to the generation of John Crowe Ransom
and his contemporaries, they were not the first to use the term to argue that literary works should be
studied as self-contained artifacts. As I have discussed, that line of thinking is evident in the surveys of
curricula included in Payne’s English in American Universities and in other early-twentieth-century
statements on the purposes of modern literary studies. In 1910 in a talk entitled the “New Criticism,”
J.E. Spingarn had set out the basic idea that historical and psychological considerations distract
“interest from the work of art to something else” (44). Spingarn called for critics to dispense with
classical authorities, romantic “abstractions,” rhetorical precepts, and “moral judgment” to concentrate
on how an artist’s intentions are realized in the work itself (52-61). Literary criticism was positioned
in a comparable way by John Crowe Ransom’s ironically titled “Criticism, Inc.” in 1939. Ransom
positioned literary critics as outsiders to both the academy and the popular culture because they stood
aloof from public tastes and were opposed to the mindset of scientists, scholars, and educators. Such
oppositions helped to justify the institution of new criticism as the discipline’s distinctive
methodology and ideology (as will become more fully apparent when I review the evolution of
undergraduate and graduate programs of study in the next chapter).
Ransom wrote in the urbane style of the literary magazines that remained a professional
mainstay until specialized journals proliferated, but “Criticism, Inc.” is a carefully calculated piece of
professional maneuring. Ransom maintained that if “criticism” is to “become more scientific,” it must
be “seriously taken in hand by professionals. . . . which means that its proper seat is the universities”
(455). A year later Ransom pronounced that “The Age of Criticism” had come (4). It arrived as
English departments were trying to make sense of sharp increases in students and faculty. Reflecting
back over this “revolution” in English departments in 1925, Fred Lewis Pattee noted that “nothing in
American educational history—in all its areas a most sensational field—has been more sensational
than the growth of English departments everywhere during the last two decades” (205).109 After the
Second World War, literary criticism completed its rise to become a recognized academic specialty, “a
profession that one can practice with self-respect and a serious sense of responsibility” (Hyman 7).110
No longer accepting “its traditional status as an adjunct to ‘creative’ or ‘imaginative literature,’”
criticism had become a “methodological art: the criticism of criticism” (Glicksberg 55). The New
Criticism was instrumental in distancing literary studies from the more politically engaged schools of
The effects of this growth on the curricula are evident in surveys in the 1920s. Taylor’s 1929 survey
of over two hundred departments shows that composition had largely become confined to the first year, with
seventy-percent of institutions in the East using literature to teach composition, as compared to under twenty
percent in the Midwest and West, where rhetoric was taught in conjunction with composition by three quarters of
departments, as compared to less than half that in the East (12-13). A.H.R. Fairchild’s study of forty-eight
departments suggests that the major had become pretty clearly drawn. The first year was commonly given over
to composition and rhetoric, though a third of the respondents included a survey of British literature in the first
year, with the rest offering it in the second year. The last years of study included a variety of courses in
American literature, modern literature, the history of drama, Romantic and Victorian literature, Shakespeare, and
“Old English or Chaucer or History of the Language” (153). Three departments had abandoned linguistic studies,
and one third of all the respondents noted that linguistic requirements had come to be seen as undesirable (156)
110
I will not be able to look past the New Critics to examine the more sociologically oriented critics that
Hyman and later historians have looked to for alternatives to the rising influence of the New Critics within the
profession. Hyman himself argued for making Marxism the “foundation” of the discipline, with “dialectical
materialism” set out as an “integrative frame” for literary studies (397).
109
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criticism that were popular in the Progressive era—“Leftists, or Proletarians,” who Ransom dismissed
for being as didactic as belletristic moralists (457).111
While teaching the public taste was a longstanding duty of the critic, the New Critics
professionalized that role by offering more rigorous analytical methods that explicitly distanced
literature from its educational uses, while providing a methodology that proved very effective in
translating the work of the profession into a method of instruction. Ransom and other New Critics
such as Allen Tate openly expressed “contempt” for “educationists” such as Dewey (Tate 474). In his
landmark essay “The Present Function of Criticism,” Tate positions literary criticism in opposition to
the “rise of the social sciences and their influence in education.” For Tate, the “coming of the slave
society” is nowhere more apparent than in “the intellectual movement variously known as positivism,
pragmatism, [or] instrumentalism” (474). Tate scorned the “vulgarity of the ‘utilitarian attitude’” and
noted that there is “but a step from the crude sociology of the normal school to the cloistered historical
scholarship of the graduate school” (474). As is suggested by such positionings, Tate, Ransom, and
other literary critics were maneuvering for standing in graduate programs, in part by positioning
themselves above the teaching of teachers, as Tate himself did in 1939 when he moved from the
Women’s College of North Carolina to Princeton University (a move followed by other leading New
Critics teaching in such provincial towns as Nashville and Baton Rouge). New Criticism came to
define college English studies because its interpretive methods proved to be highly effective in
pedagogical practice, though part of the effect was to divorce the field of study from the field of work.
The New Criticism reacted against the mass culture’s encroachment on the literate tradition by
creating methods that enabled literature to be taught on a massive scale. The contradictions between
the purposes and functions of the New Criticism worked to set the critical apparatus of the profession
in opposition to its institutional base.112
New criticism set out a less rhetorical and more “objective” conception of literature by
concentrating on “the nature of the object rather than its effects upon the subject.” The “personal”
responses of readers were to be excluded along with other extraneous “Historical,” Linguistic,” and
“Moral studies” (Ransom 462-64). According to Gerry Graff’s Professing Literature, the New Critics
succeeded in expunging “the genteel schoolmarm theory of literature, which had defined literature as a
kind of prettified didacticism” and replaced it with a “theory of the radical ‘autonomy’ of the
imagination” (5). As detailed in Wellek’s defensive postmortem in 1978, New Criticism in the end
became identified with a formalist methodology with scientific pretensions—little more than a
“pedagogical device, . . . explication de texte” (55). As Wellek notes in his attempt to repudiate such
claims, the charge that New Criticism made a science of literature is ironic, for Tate and others viewed
“scientism” as “a spiritual disorder” (Tate, “Present Function” 469). However, Tate and other New
Critics did define the object of study as “the specific objectivity” of the literary work, “an objectivity
that the subject matter, abstracted from the form, wholly lacks” (Tate, “Miss Emily” 14). By defining
their studies in such terms, literary critics internalized the logic that they opposed in an effort to make
criticism rigorously methodical in order to compete with the standing of the sciences. These formalist
tendencies have been examined by Graff, who attributes them to the “routinization” of New Critics’
methods in general education (“‘Who Killed Criticism?’” 126). With the title “Criticism, Inc.,”
Ransom plays off the irony inherent in the project of making literature into a profession with an anticommercial ethos, for as Ransom discusses, English departments, like “any other going business,”
must secure their “proprietary interest” by becoming more scientific in order to compete with history
and philology (458).
The broader irony of the New Criticism is that it came to have a pervasive impact on
specialized literary studies because its methods were effective in teaching general education. As Graff
discusses in Professing Literature, the New Criticism became influential just as general education
programs were being set up to deal with the broader classes of students graduating from high schools
111
As Ohmann discusses, the apolitical stance of the New Critics suited the professional aspirations of
faculty and students who “were trying to cut loose from their social origins and join an intellectual elite” (92).
112
Ohmann has argued that the New Critics’ method of close reading “neutralizes and flattens out. . .
impulses to action,” instilling a political passivity well suited to an era when English professors were making the
transition from poorly paid educators to well paid professionals (90). Unfortunately, most workers in the field
did not share in that transition.
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113
and returning from the war (162-79). The New Criticism provided methods of close reading that
students could use to write passable analyses even if they did not know much more about literature
than the text in front of them. These methods were justified by the assumption that giving students
direct contact with a masterpiece would enable them to appreciate its powers. That assumption was
popularized not just by New Critics but by other general education reformers such as Mortimer Adler
who were concerned with teaching basic literate strategies to broader classes of readers. Selfinstruction manuals such as Adler’s How to Read a Book and I.A. Richards’s How to Read a Page
became popular when literacy and the literate are expanding and new classes of readers have to be
taught how to read appropriately. The close reading strategies that came to be identified with the New
Criticism were connected with the new pedagogy in Richards’ Practical Criticism. Richards analyzed
the failings of several hundred students’ explications of unattributed poems, much as the Harvard
Reports had done to establish composition as the only universally required courses in the
undergraduate curriculum. Richards understood that poems are defined in part by “the quality of the
reading we give them,” but he did not take into account how fact made literary modes of reading
dependent upon context (349). His students understandably resorted to “stock responses” because they
were denied details on “authorship, period, . . . or the hint of a context” (315). Richards attributed his
students’ failings to the limitations of their reading skills rather than to how his assignments limited
the transactional dynamics of reading texts against contexts, including the questions that one is asked
to read for (see Graff, Professing Literature 177).
While Richards undertook the sort of research on students’ reading and writing that was
needed to expand the base of literary studies in a more broadly engaged manner, his account of his
students’ illiteracies unfortunately provides a telling example of how formalist approaches divorce
reading and writing from the contexts in which they function, as New Criticism tended to do by
ignoring the challenges of teaching literature to students from varied backgrounds. Richards and other
New Critics idealized the wholeness of experience to be realized in close readings of literature, but
their approach discouraged students from connecting their responses to their own experiences. While
many professors of literature have complained about “the poverty” of students’ “literary experience,”
Richards was one of the few to try to study the sources of that problem, and he was widely condemned
as a positivist for doing so (Practical 312). The potentials and limitations of Richards’ writings are
important to consider because he was one of the few figures in our history to publish influential works
in all four corners of our field—in English education, applied linguistics and world Englishes, literary
and cultural studies, and writing, including poetry and plays as well as rhetoric and composition.114 If
other English professors had taken up his wide-ranging research on teaching and the uses of literacy,
the formalist tendencies of the New Criticism might have been called to account against studies of
how students interpret what they read in the contexts of what they have learned and experienced.
Unfortunately, the pedagogy of the New Criticism systematically ignored students’ learning
experiences by dismissing educational work and concentrating on formal explications of isolated texts.
As the New Criticism came to define the profession’s higher purposes, its broader
responsibilities were being redefined by the progressive movement. Experience was set out as a key
concern of New Critics as well as progressives in two texts published in 1938: Dewey’s Experience
and Education, and the best known statement of the New Criticism, Brook and Warren’s textbook,
In “The Old Professor of English: An Autopsy,” Pattee commiserates on the passing of the generation
who taught “an uncommercialized, unpopularized, unmodern phase of literature” (219). One can see how critics
felt demeaned by teaching general education in Pattee’s comments on how his Pennsylvania State University
students asked “how is this dope going to help a guy get a job and pull down a good salary” and then returned
years later as rich alumni smug in the knowledge that they made far more than he did (182-83).
114
Berthoff has maintained that Richards’s protocols represent “the first genuine research in the teaching
of English” (“I.A. Richards” 56). Richards assumed that the pragmatics of learning can provide insights into
cognition, semiotics, and symbolic action, but at least at Cambridge, he was not challenged to consider how
differing social contexts shape students’ responses because he worked with male students who largely came from
a narrow range of social backgrounds. This limitation is important because Richards was a founder of not just
New Criticism but reader-response theory. As Spurlin discusses, many reader-response theorists followed New
Critics in assuming that “the text and reader alone are sufficient to define the contexts for reading,” even though
“readers do not operate in a vacuum” apart from “social, political, historical, and cultural conditions” (240-1).
113
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Understanding Poetry, which set out the assumption that “the poem itself is an experience” (32). Both
New Critics and progressives responded to the challenges of teaching literacy to broader classes of
students by focusing on the experience of making sense of the printed page, but New Critics and
progressives diverged on how broadly they engaged with that experience. For progressives, it was a
guiding principle that “subject matter” was secondary to “pupil needs” (Seely 11-12). As Angus and
Mirel have discussed, the progressives’ “most extensive revisions appeared in English” (30). The
“experience curriculum” was organized around interdisciplinary “projects” and themes that
undermined the autonomy of individual disciplines. Such themes as “Health” and “Vocation” were set
out in the influential Cardinal Principles of Secondary Education (1918) to map out inquiries that left
literature as a matter for the “Worthy Use of Leisure” or “Ethical Character.”115 Instruction in reading
and writing was redirected away from introducing students to literature toward using it to introduce
them to social issues, making literature sometimes merely “an adjunct to sociological exploration”
according to Moulton (60). As a result, in the 1930s the “experience curriculum” was cited some two
hundred times in NCTE journals, and not once in those of the MLA. Dewey acknowledged that the
weakest aspect of progressivism was its treatment of “intellectual subject matter,” but he identified the
liberal arts with passive methods of instruction and an indifference to practical applications that were
“out of touch with all the conditions of modern life” (Experience 78).
The most broadly encompassing efforts to reform the discipline in the 1930s were undertaken
by the Curriculum Commission and related NCTE committees. NCTE worked with interdisciplinary
groups such as the National Education Association and the Progressive Educational Association to
produce conferences and publications in order to foster collaborations among a broad range of teachers
and professors of English and education. Drawing on classroom research and reports from teachers in
schools and colleges, several influential committee reports were published: Oscar Campbell’s The
Teaching of College English, Hatfield’s An Experience Curriculum in English, Broening’s Conducting
Experiences in English, and A Correlated Curriculum by Scott’s student and NCTE President Ruth
Mary Weeks.116 These efforts were all based on the assumption that “experience is the best of all
schools” (Campbell, Teaching 20). They were also specifically intended to respond to high schools’
being “dominated” by the “college entrance requirements” set out by the College Entrance
Examination Board. The CEEB provoked such responses by replacing essays on literature with
objective tests that “called into question the presumed centrality of literacy, as it was defined by
departments of English” (Trachsel 103). High school English courses were redefined by the dual
purposes of teaching communication as an aid to “social activities” and providing “indirect (vicarious)
experiences where direct experiences are impossible” (Hatfield 3). The “dynamic philosophy of
English as experience” and “the passion for life that literature itself exemplifies” were intended as an
“emotional prophylactic” to the rising influence of the mass media—radio, film, and “the pulps” that
fostered a “revulsion to the classics” (Broening 4-5; Campbell 11). “Intensive” reading in literary
classics was balanced with extensive readings guided by students’ interests to encourage “healthful”
leisure and “discipline. . . unruly, unsocial emotions” (Campbell 53-55).
A comprehensive assessment of the teaching of English in college is provided by the
companion volume to Hatfield’s Experience Curriculum, Oscar Campbell’s The Teaching of College
English. The collection surveys the broader work of the field, including articulations between high
schools and colleges, composition and general education courses, introductory surveys of literature,
undergraduate majors, and graduate programs, which like other levels of the curriculum were judged
by how well they integrated “humanistic, cultural, and practical” concerns (128). Articulation became
even more important as community colleges increased from 1.9% to 17.6% of college enrollments
The popular Project Method was published by William Kilpatrick, a colleague of Dewey’s at
Teacher’s College, Columbia. Students set up collaborative teams to research social issues. This methodology
was similar to the community ethnographies of Ira Shor and other proponents of critical pedagogy, but the
politics of the Project Method were accommodationist. In practice it combined “scientific management with a
free-market faith in the individual” (Holt 81; see also Russell 205). The Project Method was widely promoted by
the editor of the English Journal, William Hatfield, and it was a principal part of the “experience curriculum.”
116
In Conducting Experiences in English, Broening reports on the curricula of 274 teachers, noting that
“principals, supervisors, and teachers everywhere report that their courses in English are based upon the
experiences of their pupils,” and every textbook salesperson cites An Experience in English (v).
115
101
between 1918 and 1940, with three-quarters of community colleges still located in high schools in the
1930s (David Levine 162; Oscar James Campbell 32). As disciplines and students became more
diversified, Campbell and other progressives looked to “correlation” to redress specialization by
fostering interdisciplinary collaborations on literacy and literary studies. Other formative trends are
addressed in ways that might have moved the discipline along a very different trajectory. Creative
writing and composition courses are related by their shared concern for transactional work with
reading and writing. Surveys of literature are criticized for failing to engage students in ways that
could make literature a “criticism and revelation of life” (58). Undergraduate programs are examined
against the fact that many majors intended to teach and teachers require distinctive training (59). On
this and other points, The Teaching of College English surveys the field with an eye to students’ needs
and purposes. Campbell and his collaborators responded to many the same institutional conditions as
the New Critics, but progressives responded to these pressures with an interdisciplinary vision of
collaborative learning that was meant to enlist faculty in other disciplines in becoming “teachers of
composition” in order to reduce the overwhelming workloads faced by teachers of English (7).
Conclusion: So Why Didn’t College English Become a More Progressive Discipline?
According to Graff, “what was needed” in this formative phase of the institutionalization of
modern literary studies was not just new methods of literary criticism but “hard thinking and open
debate about the larger cultural situation of literary studies,” for a “gulf had developed” between
literary studies and literate society (Professing 96-7). If one positions modern literary studies within
the broader history of literacy studies, one can see that the configuration of literature as a selfcontained object of study paralleled the rise of linguistics to become an autonomous science that was
unconcerned with practical questions about how language is learned and used. These trends distanced
the basic work of the discipline from its higher purposes by reducing teacher education and writing
instruction to merely methodical matters. Composition courses were further marginalized by the
distinction between creative and technical writing that arose out of literary critics’ general hostility to
practical applications and popular journalism. As a result of these trends, the profession failed to
realize the historical possibilities arising from its expansive articulation apparatus, including its broad
base in public education, its central role in college admissions, its interdisciplinary involvement with
writing to learn and learning to write, and the traditional emphasis on journalism, rhetoric, and public
address that had positioned the discipline to speak for the political reforms of the Progressive era.
While politically oriented critics did engage literary studies with the issues of the day, the New Critics
were instrumental in distancing the intellectual concerns of the discipline from the historical changes
that were reconfiguring its institutional base.
When our disciplinary frame of reference is expanded to include college admissions,
journalism, general education, teachers colleges, and other institutions that opened up access to
underrepresented groups, then we can see that the reaction against the progressive movement was
fueled by the anxieties that the expansion of literacy and education was undermining the social
standing of the literary studies. The loss of literary studies’ “sovereignty” in the correlated curriculum
led some to ask “Is English on the Way Out?” (Henry). Henry was not alone in concluding that the
discipline was in a “dire predicament” because “mass education is being tried at the secondary level,”
and “liberal education” cannot be conveyed to “a throng disqualified by verbal incompetency,
congenital defects, undernourishment, brutalization, experiential limitations, and harsh economic
uncertainty” (Henry 284). Insofar as “English-as-a-course and mass education” were fundamentally
“incompatible,” the discipline was going to be forced to play “second fiddle to the militant socialscience groups that had suddenly decided to save democracy” (286). Such anxieties were often vented
on ceremonial occasions such as MLA conventions, as in Prokosch’s Presidential Address, “Treason
within the Castle.” Positioning English departments as bastions of the culture of the book, Prokosch
called for efforts to raise up the “scientific character of our departments” to strengthen the defenses of
the discipline and deter students from majoring in English as a refuge from the rigors of linguistics or
foreign languages (1324). The MLA responded by establishing The Commission on Trends in
Education Adverse to the Teaching of Modern Languages and Literatures. The Commission was
responding to the same trends as the NCTE curriculum committees I have discussed, but it did little to
come to terms with the expansion of print and new media, or to prepare broader classes of students to
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address the social problems of the time. In its Preliminary Statement of its findings in 1939, the
Commission criticized the lack of discipline of educators and education students and blamed trends in
general education for being “menacing to our subjects and to the humanities in general” (Doyle 1350).
Such hostilities were due in part to the fact that humanists were losing public influence to the
social sciences, as Elizabeth Wilson has discussed.117 Insofar as progressives tried to make education
into a social science, they were perceived to be anti-humanistic. Progressives responded by arguing
that if literature “needs defending,” as presumed by the MLA Commission on Trends in Education,
then English majors need to be made more broadly suited to students’ needs, and “learned societies”
should become more than “curators of relics” and become more involved with “general education and
even pedagogy” (Basler 63). The NCTE did sponsor just such broadly based research on pedagogy,
but many of the accounts of the social purposes of English studies that emerge from those surveys
suffer from the sort of limited conception of literature and literacy that almost inevitably arises when
literary critics, compositionists, linguists, and English education specialists fail to confer.118 The
weaknesses in progressives’ accounts of the social purposes of education are particularly crucial
because progressives defined literary and literacy studies by their social uses. These limitations can be
seen in influential accounts of progressive reforms of high school English studies such as Roberts,
Kaulfers, and Kefauver’s English for Social Living. Surveys of literature are replaced with “problemsolving” courses in which students select readings to advance collaborative projects (255). As Moulton
discusses, similar texts such as Educating for Peace (1940) and Pupils are People (1941) defined
literary studies by the “instrumental” purposes of enhancing individual development and addressing
social problems. Such purposes might have been more richly defined if humanists had become more
broadly engaged in deliberations with teachers on the politics of the liberal imagination.
One of the contemporaries of the New Critics did provide models and methods for engaging in
collaborations with sociologists and educators on literary and literacy studies—Kenneth Burke, whose
rhetorical criticism was concerned with “Literature as Equipment for Living,” which was exactly the
sort of terminology commonly used by progressives (Philosophy). Because Burke routinely
transgressed the disciplinary distinction between literary and rhetorical criticism, he was a
“taxonomical embarrassment” to most professors of English (Gabin 203). Politically oriented
commentators such as Hyman recognized that academic specialists could only make use of parts of
Burke because he ranged so freely across linguistics, philosophy, literature, and anthropology that he
had “no field, unless it be Burkology” (359). Like the progressives, Burke developed an
interdisciplinary perspective concerned with the social sources and political uses of interpretation, and
“symbolic action” more generally. Like the New Critics with whom he was sometimes identified,
Burke was concerned with how formal elements of texts embody the psychological and cultural
dynamics of interpretive experience. Unlike the New Critics, and like the progressives, Burk saw
poetics as integrally related to rhetoric’s traditional concern for the situated dynamics of civic action.
Burke’s rich engagement with the pragmatics of symbolic action provides perhaps the best example of
how much the discipline lost by reducing rhetoric to methods for teaching marginalized courses in
syntactic proprieties, while at the same time isolating literary studies from the social uses of literacy.
As is powerfully evident in Burke, rhetoric might have provided categories for articulating the
civic values of collective deliberations on public issues, but rhetoric had become so confined to the
117
According to Ross, psychology, economics, sociology, and political science began establishing
specialized journals and graduate programs in the last decades of the nineteenth century (at the same time as
English professors), but the social sciences only became identified as part of a coherent educational project after
1920. Larson has discussed how the social sciences advanced an “ideology of expertise” that was instrumental in
reshaping public education, while at the same time “possessive individualism” became a key element in “liberal
political thought,” resulting in a general “impoverishment” of the public sphere (30). The progressive movement
was caught up in these trends, while literary studies were largely set in opposition to them.
118
For example, to investigate the social uses of English studies, Pendleton surveyed hundreds of
teachers, graduate students, and community leaders as well as textbooks and curricula. Pendleton’s Social
Objectives of School English (1924) lists over fifteen hundred “social outcomes,” with the top ranked being
spelling, speaking in correct sentences, and “economy” of expression. Even the more substantive outcomes do
not amount to more than reading literature for enjoyment or speaking “tactfully and efficiently,” and these
outcomes are characterized in moralistic qualities such as being honest, “constructive,” and “alert” (36).
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mechanics of teaching composition and so shrouded in formalism that it was presented as an “extinct
art,” belonging “to the past as much as the toga and the snuffbox” (Manly and Rickert rptd. Brereton
431). Even a creative thinker with an expansive and integrated view of the discipline such as I.A.
Richards characterized rhetoric as “the dreariest and least profitable part of the waste that the
unfortunate travel through in Freshman English” (Philosophy 3). Given such institutional constraints
and professional attitudes, the productive capacities of rhetoric were ignored, and rhetoric became at
best an aid to the “study of misunderstanding and its remedies,” and as such merely an ancillary to the
interest in semantics popularized by the postwar communications movement (3; see ***). New Critics
dismissed rhetoric’s traditional concern for intentions and effects as “fallacies” that end up in
“impressionism and relativism” because they mislead the “objective critic” by confusing a poem with
its results, “what it is and what it does” (Wimsatt 32, 21). In one of the major works of the New
Criticism, Wimsatt’s Verbal Icon, Aristotle’s Rhetoric is identified with a “pragmatic” concern for
purposes and audiences that is set apart from a distinctly “literary” approach, which is by definition
concerned with the form of the work itself (xv; see also Abrams). The formalist presuppositions of the
New Criticism make it the epitome of the “transparent” disciplinarity that Russell has discussed as a
characteristic feature of how academics in this period were composing highly rhetorical practices that
depended on not appearing rhetorical to achieve their effects.119
The professional opposition of literary criticism to the progressive movement presented
virtually insurmountable barriers even to those who attempted to engage literary studies with
educational work. One of the most influential attempts was published by the Progressive Educational
Association in the same year as Dewey’s Experience and Education and Brooks and Warren’s
Understanding Poetry. Louise Rosenblatt’s Literature as Exploration was one of the most promising
efforts to bridge the concerns of New Critics and progressives. Her interdisciplinary approach to
literary studies drew from Dewey’s Art as Experience as well as Richards’s Practical Criticism. In a
foreword to the fifth edition (published by MLA in 1995), Wayne Booth concluded that no “literary
critic of this century has enjoyed and suffered as sharp a contrast of powerful influence and absurd
neglect as Louise Rosenblatt” (vii). While the book “influenced more teachers” than perhaps any other
work on literature, “the world of literary criticism and theory has only recently begun to acknowledge”
that the work was not just “a valuable guide to pedagogy in secondary teaching” (viii). Literary critics
could ignore Rosenblatt because she studied students’ responses in order to teach “emancipated youth”
to develop a “critical” stance on stock responses and “anachronistic emotional attitudes” (212).
Rosenblatt’s use of literature to contribute to “growth in the social and cultural life” aligned her with
the progressives who threatened to make literature into a social science (v). The reaction to that threat
overshadowed any attempt to build on Rosenblatt’s efforts to study the transactions between readers
and texts in the manner that Richards had undertaken. As a result, according to Booth, the New Critics
failed to recognize and avoid “the excesses that result when this or that element in the rhetorical
transaction is turned into an exclusive center” (viii).
In the year that Rosenblatt published Literature as Exploration she was invited to contribute to
the committee that grew out of the MLA’s Commission on Trends in Education. She reported being
surprised at the invitation, for “this was the very university establishment whose influence on the
teaching of literature in colleges and schools I was seeking to combat” (“Retrospect” 101). The report
of the Committee on “The Aims of the Teaching of Literature” responded to “the insistent current
demand that literary study should primarily inculcate ‘social values’” by identifying literary study as a
119
One of the more famous examples of how New Critics formalized rhetoric’s traditional concern for
the transactions of audiences and authors is Wimsatt’s quoting J.S. Mill on how “Eloquence is heard, poetry is
overheard” (xv). Such romantic mystifications distracted attention from the fact that there are few if any
methodological distinctions between New Critics’ works of literary and rhetorical studies, most notably Brooks
and Warner’s Understanding Poetry and Modern Rhetoric. Understanding Poetry opens with a rhetorical
analysis of the “emotional appeal” and other persuasive strategies in a political speech before turning to sermons,
editorials, advertisements, and the other sorts of highly purposeful and referential texts that poetry is later
positioned above by defining it according to its distinctive rhetorical effect “as a piece of writing which gives us
a certain effect in which, we discover, the ‘poetry’ inheres” (18). This concern for readers’ experience (which is
central to progressives’ accounts of literature) is obviated by a formalist methodology that brackets off authors’
intentions and audiences’ responses, and with them the social sources and functions of literature.
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means to educate “richly endowed and self-reliant individuals, sensitive to the individual lives of their
fellow men and to their own personal potentials” (1368). This “rugged individualism on the plain of
the spirit” is the point of departure for the Committee’s discussions of “Literature as Delight,”
“Literature as Imaginative Experience,” and “Literature as Document.” Literature is presented as part
of “the living tissue of its society” and a means to foster “empathy” (1368-70). This pronouncement
on the “service which the study of literature can render individuals in a democratic state” is seen by
Elizabeth Wilson as an example of how the humanities came to terms with the social sciences by
giving an imaginative tenor to the liberal individualism that bridged the professional aspirations and
political functions of academic specializations. Such reforms were facilitated by progressive educators
and other social workers. Like the other liberal accommodations of the progressive movement, what
was lacking in reader-response criticism was the civic engagement with symbolic action that is evident
in Burke and several of the other “New Rhetoricians” who I will discuss in the next chapter.
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CHAPTER FIVE
AT THE ENDS OF THE PROFESSION
The mode of being of the new intellectual can no longer consist in eloquence, which is an
exterior and momentary mover of feelings and passions, but in active participation in practical
life, as constructor, organizer, “permanent persuader” and not just a simple orator (but
superior at the same time to the abstract mathematical spirit); from technique-as-work one
proceeds to technique-as-science and to the humanistic conception of history, without which
one remains “specialized” and does not become “directive” (specialized and political).
Antonio Gramsci, Prison Notebooks
In the first volume of my history of college English, I drew upon Gramsci’s theories much
more explicitly than I have here. Nonetheless, his perspective has shaped the framework that I have
used to examine how literacy and literacy studies have evolved in conjunction with the elaboration of
civil society, with the most important modern development being the institution of professionalism as
the unifying ideology of the middle classes. One of Gramsci’s best-known concepts is his distinction
between “organic” intellectuals, who are integrally involved with the lived experience of a group, and
“traditional” intellectuals such as educators and clerics who occupy institutional positions from which
they profess to speak disinterestedly for the common good. In the passage quoted above Gramsci
pushes that distinction to argue that intellectuals must be engaged with “practical life” to influence
political developments. Gramsci identifies a “humanistic” stance with an “active participation” in
history in the making. This sense of the humanities provides a useful frame for assessing how the
discipline has responded to the practical bent of modern education. By 1950 almost sixty percent of
seventeen-year-olds were graduating from high school, and in 1965 over forty percent of eighteen- to
twenty-four-year-olds were in college (Charles Andersen 418, 435). Majors in English rose apace, and
then they suddenly collapsed. Undergraduate and graduate degrees in the field both dropped by about
fifty percent from 1972 to 1980.120 At century’s end, English departments were producing twenty
percent fewer graduates than in 1972 despite a fifty percent increase in college graduates. These
declines contributed to a collapse in professional jobs and an increase in “temporary” positions to
cover the composition courses that departments came to depend upon to maintain their size. Rather
than blaming the decline of traditional literary studies on the “New Vocationalism” as Godzich and
others have, I want to use Gramsci’s conception of a “humanistic conception of history” to reflect
upon what we are to make of recent developments in literacy and literacy studies.
As discussed in the last chapter, vocationalism has been a unifying point of opposition for the
profession since literary critics’ first secured their position by setting themselves above
“educationalists” and social scientists. That opposition can be seen as an example of how “traditional”
intellectuals reacted against the elaboration of the technical and managerial expertise that universities
120
In assessing the following numbers from the National Center for Education Statistics, one needs to
remember that “Communications” (like Business) expanded and diversified majors in ways English did not.
“Communications” today often refers to a college rather than a department. Also the NCES category 23 “English
Language and Literature/Letters” counts graduates in majors that the profession has not acknowledged as part of
the field, most notably the 8,340 graduates in 2000 that are included in the NCES subcategory 23.1001, “Speech
and Rhetorical Studies,” a category that is included in the statistics used by groups such as ADE and MLA but
which has not traditionally been recognized by those organizations as part of the field they represent (for an
elaborate justification and explication, see ADE Committee on the Major 2003, 87-90). When this category is
combined with the 1704 graduates from writing majors, the total comprises about twenty percent of all graduates
from the “field.”
1950-1 1960
1970
1980
1990
2000
Total graduates
432,058 382,440 839,730 935,140 1,094,538 1,244,171
17,240 20,128 56,410 32,541 47,519 50,920
BAs in English
3.99% 5.13% 7.21%
% of college grads.
3.5%
4.52%
Communications
10,324 29,428 51,650 58,013
Business
114,729 198,983 249,311 265,746
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121
began to produce in the Progressive era, as the Ehrenreichs and others have discussed. The
“professional-managerial classes” were provided with a general education in the cosmopolitan values
of the literate culture by English departments. However, as the technical and managerial classes
developed their own “organic” intellectuals after the last world war, they began to articulate their
status in terms of specialized expertise rather than as a general professional ethos. With that transition,
the culture of expertise came to replace the humanistic “cultural capital of the old bourgeoisie”
(Guillory 45). As Guillory and others have discussed, our profession also developed its own class of
technical experts (compositionists) to administer its basic services. Such accounts generally serve to
defend traditional literary hierarchies and offer little help in setting out more broadly engaged
conceptions of the humanities such as Gramsci’s. Such a stance is needed to assess what potentials for
an “active participation in practical life” have opened up to professors in the era that saw the greatest
historical expansion of public access to advanced instruction in the humanities.
Of course much depends upon how we relate literacy studies to “practical life.” Throughout
the history of the liberal and mechanical arts, humanists have looked down upon vocationalism. Since
at least the Yale Report in 1828, humanists have complained about students being too concerned with
working for a living. Such complaints have generally been directed at classes of students deemed
unworthy of liberal education. In the Progressive era, this stance led to the research university’s being
criticized for instituting a “barbarian frame of mind” epitomized by such “pragmatic, utilitarian
disciplines” as education and engineering. It was assumed that academics should keep their distance
from public education, especially “’university extension,’ and similar excursions into the field of
public amusement” (Veblen, Higher Learning 34). This stance distanced traditional intellectuals from
the services they provided in the credentialing of the professional and managerial classes—and also
helped position those services on a de-professionalized plain suited to temporary and part-time faculty.
This research hierarchy would be turned against English departments after the economic downturn of
the 1970s, when the intellectual work of academics began to be evaluated in terms of the profits it
generated. Because research in college English had been defined in studiously impractical terms,
departments of English became even more dependent on the work that they had discounted with
general education. The anti-vocationalism of the humanities has been marked by an open disdain for
those who have looked to education as a means to social advancement. As discussed in previous
chapters, the aspirations of women, workers, and people of color have historically been channeled into
vocational tracks that were deemed to lack intellectual credibility, in part because our discipline has
not invested its intellectual capital in developing humanistic approaches to teaching and writing for
popular audiences. Tracking the less worthy into classes on teaching methods and the mechanics of
writing has functioned to contain the forces for change that new classes of students bring to the field.
The marginalization of teaching and writing advanced the aspirations of English departments
in the “the golden age” of the research university. The rise of the “multiversity” is aptly surveyed in
Clark Kerr’s tellingly entitled The Uses of the University.122 The “multiversity” would be a center of
human resource development for the “knowledge economy,” with research parks to channel expertise
into the private sector.123 Kerr provides an incisive assessment of the accountability and efficiency
measures that did not really take hold until after the explosive growth of the 1960s. Kerr looked to the
rise of the research university as an international institution intertwined with the growth of
multinational corporations. As president of the largest university system in America and chairman of
According to Barbara and John Ehrenreich, the “professional-managerial classes” “emerged with
dramatic suddenness in the years between 1890 and 1920” with the creation of social service professionals,
scientific technicians, management experts, and “culture producers” for the mass media (18, 9).
122
As Kerr discusses, between 1960 and 1980, college enrollments grew from 3.5 to 12 million, with
community colleges growing tenfold from 400,000 to 4 million. While teacher colleges had enrolled only half a
million in 1960, they evolved into comprehensive and research universities that enrolled six times that number
two decades later. Federal funding rose from $300 million to $10 billion. Universities became entrepreneurial
institutions “dominated by professional schools” with research centers, extension programs, and business
partnerships that marked “the last and conclusive triumph of the Sophists over the Philosophers” (xiii).
123
According to Kerr, the “multiversity” became the leading institution in the “knowledge industry” as it
came to “permeate government and business” (Uses 66). As Kerr observed, by the early 1960s 29% of the GNP
was involved in the production and distribution of knowledge according to Machlup.
121
107
the Carnegie Commission, Kerr was instrumental in accounting for the establishment of the research
university as the center of higher education. That standpoint is especially disorienting for assessing the
work of English departments. In fact, by 1980 fewer students were attending research universities than
community colleges, which enrolled one in three college students. “Junior colleges” helped to uphold
the research hierarchies of the profession by providing masses of students with low cost composition
and literature courses. When we expand our field of vision to community colleges (and high schools),
the historic scope of our field of vision expands dramatically, and we are challenged to assess what our
profession has made of its expansive educational capacities.
In this chapter, I will survey several historical junctures where development in our field have
converged with broader trends. Such shifts in a field of cultural production occur, according to
Bourdieu, as a result of “change in the power relation which constitutes the space of positions” (Logic
32). Adopting the humanistic stance set out by Gramsci may enable us to focus on the socioinstitutional junctures where those changes converge. At such sites, disciplinary trends often work in
tandem with social movements that can be enlisted to advance broader reforms—if institutional
resources can be marshaled by practitioners. Institutional resources, social movements, and
disciplinary trends provide the means, opportunities, and justifications for historical change in higher
education. When social, institutional, and disciplinary trends converge in a particular area, it can take
on considerable historical potential.
Each section of this chapter is focused on how a particular area of the field took on critical
importance in successive decades in the last half of the twentieth century. In the decade after the
Second World War, the profession was hard pressed to disarticulate its higher purposes from its
expanding service functions. To serve the exploding numbers of students, general education programs
were established that laid the groundwork for the rise of the profession. In the sixties, disciplinary,
social, and institutional trends converged around partnerships with schools as English departments
sought to claim some of the federal funding that flowed into education in the post-Sputnik era. These
initiatives presented an historic opportunity to establish an integrated field of work that reached from
grammar to graduate school. These efforts largely ended with the collapse of funding, jobs, and majors
in English at the end of the 1960s. In the 1970s, pressures built up to restructure programs of study to
address students’ changing needs and aspirations, though English curricula proved remarkably
resistant to change. Writing studies emerged as a recognized area of graduate studies, but the
challenges posed by writing, and the teaching of writing, were contained by establishing separate
programs rather than by revising basic assumptions. The rift between composition and literary studies
in the 1980s was part of a series of shifts in “power relations” that also contributed to the turn to
theory and the “culture wars.” These developments were shaped by what Ira Shor has characterized as
the “conservative restoration.” That restoration contributed to broad declines in educational access. In
retrospect, we can now see such steps as the cutting edge of the privatization of public learning that
has restructured education, and civil society. While the discipline has not traditionally concerned itself
with these broader socio-institutional trends, I believe that the pragmatic turn in the1990s has opened
up a field of vision in which such matters as “English Only” movements and the deprofessionalization
of teaching are coming to be seen as part of the concerns of college English studies. I hope that my
historical survey will contribute to this pragmatic reassessment by highlighting some of the historical
junctures where the discipline has confronted the forces at work at the ends of the profession.
The Consolidation of the Institutional Base of the Profession in the 1950s
Disciplinary historians such as Gerald Graff have examined how the postwar growth of
general education programs enabled the profession to expand and consolidate its institutional position
(see also Connors and Russell). As discussed in the last chapter, the formalism of New Criticism
provided methods for handling less literate students without having to come to terms with the
challenges their experiences posed. Formalist approaches to teaching reading and writing helped
consolidate a disciplinary economy that transferred the values of literacy in use to the higher purposes
of the profession. Intellectual and institutional resources generated by general education enrollments
were invested in building up a research mission that lacked the external sources of support that other
disciplines drew upon. In their absence, English and other humanities disciplines came to depend upon
cheaply delivered general education courses to support research workloads for selected faculty. Those
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faculty formed the leadership of the profession and shaped its sense of purpose through their control of
graduate programs, journals, and the rest of the profession’s articulation apparatus. The research
agendas of those faculty shaped the graduate programs that provided the teachers to cover the
discipline’s basic obligations. This political economy depended upon the use value of utilitarian
offerings, and reacted against that dependence with an anti-utilitarian stance that identified literary
studies as the real work of the discipline.
In the years after the war, the public’s sense of the humanities came to be defined, according
to Veysey, by the “outpouring” of books on general education that characterized the humanities by
their opposition to the methods of the social sciences (57). Perhaps the most influential was the
Presidential Commission’s six-volume report, Higher Education for American Democracy. That report
concluded that “general education is liberal education with its matter and method shifted from its
original aristocratic intent to the service of democracy” (rptd. in Hofstadter and Smith 2:990). The
Commission identified English as particularly fundamental to the humanities. The Commission’s
vision of the humanities was shaped by an earlier report, General Education in a Free Society, which
was produced by a Harvard committee that included I.A. Richards. According to that report,
instruction in the humanities reveals “an organic process, which is the American, and, more broadly,
the Western evolution” (rptd. 2:958). By serving as a “secular continuation of the Spirit of
Protestantism,” this humanistic “heritage” would inoculate students against the “hostility to tradition”
that was endemic to the “the scientific attitude,” especially “pragmatism” (rptd. in Hofstadter and
Smith 2:957, 960). As Graff has discussed, this ahistorical traditionalism set up the context for the rise
of New Criticism, which served to “rescue tradition from the jaws of history” by providing a
methodology for reading texts as literary embodiments of humanistic ideals divorced from their
political sources and functions (Professing 171; see also Said).
These reports located English studies at the center of general education, but that position
threatened to define the profession by the service work that aspiring departments were using to raise
their profiles.124 To advance such aspirations, university administrators supported the founding of
community colleges as a means to download general education, especially the instruction of the less
advantaged. Community colleges typically cost less than half of the in-state tuition of a public
university. Higher education was stratified largely by the costs of the competing private and public
institutions that make up the American system. The expansion of the postwar period was fueled by an
explosion in federal funding, which was largely divided between funds for individual research projects
and direct grants to students. Rather than investing in the instructional infrastructure, this funding
system reinforced the competitive ethos of higher education by setting individual students and faculty
in direct financial competition with each other.125 Universities began to become dependent upon the
entrepreneurial activities of star researchers, while students’ competition for access to elite institutions
was given the appearance of a meritocracy by admissions tests of basic skills. Like the “external
funding” that drove research priorities in many field, those tests were not controlled by disciplines but
were drawn up by a large corporation that tested students not on their content mastery, as in Germany,
Britain, and other countries, but on their general achievement in ways that systematically compounded
academic aptitudes with cultural backgrounds (see Trachsel). This laissez-faire educational economy
has fostered the popular impression that Americans of ability who are willing to work and sacrifice are
124
The dependence of English departments on cheaply provided general education courses only became
a professional concern after the crash in majors and jobs in the 1970s, but the institutional economies at work
date back to the expansion of the research mission in the postwar period, when research faculty workloads were
instituted that would have been prohibitively expensive if community colleges had not been used to provide
general education courses staffed by teachers who were used to heavy teaching loads. Despite the fact that
community colleges were the fastest growing sector of higher education, the average cost per student rose from
$2000 in 1930 to $5000 in 1960 and $9000 in 1990 (Kerr, Uses 179). This institutional economy was founded on
the distinction of permanent funding vested in faculty lines from “temporary” funding dispensed to “cover”
general education courses. That distinction made general education seem to be an extraneous cost that distracted
from departments’ core missions, rather than as a highly profitable area of instruction that subsidized the
research infrastructure.
125
In the 1950s, federal funding for higher education rose from $2.7 to $6.2 billion, with the funding per
student rising by 50% from $1159 to $1747 (Machlup 79).
109
free to rise to achieve their potential. By providing the semblance of a meritocracy that provides equal
opportunities for individuals to advance from class to class according to their abilities, higher
education legitimizes the inequalities that people confront when they leave the classroom and enter the
“real world’” (see Karen).
These trends shaped the rise of New Criticism to become the methodology that defined the
discipline. As Cain has discussed, in the 1940s New Criticism became “an established practice, and by
the early 1950s it was ‘the Establishment’ itself.’” Cain and others have noted that the methods of
New Criticism had a “democratic” appeal because they helped broader classes of “students learn to
read” (101). Of course the subtleties of literary explications are most accessible to those who can read
between the lines to appreciate nuances that are often lost on the less sophisticated. Many professors
who came into the profession in the 1950s have recounted how they learned a new mode of reading by
teaching that “sacred textbook Understanding Poetry” (Ohmann, English in America 79). New
Criticism served the needs of the profession by promising to transform its distinctive expertise into a
remedy for nothing less than the ills of the age. In reassessing the promise of New Criticism to heal a
culture infected by a market mentality, Ohmann has suggested that “a general principle of ideology is
helpful: a privileged social group will generalize its own interests so that they appear to be universal
social goals” (“Teaching” 92). According to Ohmann, this principle applies to the close reading
strategies that systematically isolated texts from their social sources and political purposes in ways that
were consistent with bourgeois assumptions that culture is apolitical. In their efforts to strip literature
of its ideological trappings and social functions, Ohmann’s generation was sometimes disconcerted to
discover how readily students accepted modernist critiques of conventional assumptions. From a
distance, we can see that such reactions were not really all that surprising coming from those seeking
to rise above their provincial origins and acquire the sensibility of a liberally educated professional.126
New Criticism provided English departments with a means to teach reading to students who
were not well versed in literature, but the discipline also faced encroachments on its institutional base
by interdisciplinary approaches to teaching writing that stressed communications rather than literature.
According to Crowley’s Composition in the University, the communications movement was the first
time that English departments’ “ownership” of composition was challenged by those “who had
sufficient clout to divert it from its humanist moorings in literature and current traditional pedagogy”
(156). Descriptions of several dozen communications programs were collected and edited by Earl
James McGrath in 1949. As U.S. Commissioner of Education, McGrath was an early advocate of
bilingual education and other efforts to expand the reach of research universities. Communications
courses were a basic part of the general education programs that were hastily put together to handle the
million veterans who were sent to college in 1945 (Gary Miller 115). McGrath and other contributors
drew broadly on progressive efforts to use the “experiences of students as vehicles of instruction” (vi).
Many “communications” programs were defined by studies of mass communications, while some
were defined simply by the four communication skills, or more generally by structuralist models of
language as a system of communications. Virtually all emphasized semantics, with semiotics
sometimes used to frame studies of “symbolic transformation” and the “economical gestalt of the
symbolic process” (Grey 11). Semiotic models were sometimes drawn from texts such as Ogden and
Richards The Meaning of Meaning and Charles Morris’s Signs, Language and Behavior (1946), but
the general source was American structural linguistics, along with related trends in cultural
anthropology and social psychology. The progressivist synthesis of scientific methods and socialexpressivist objectives is evident in the collection’s conclusion that communications courses shared a
common base in “a biological-psychological-anthropological idea of communication as the process of
self-realization in expressive interaction with society” (Shoemaker 243).
This fusion of scientism and expressivism was consistent with some of the best and worst
tendencies of progressivism. As discussed in the last chapter, progressives often turned to science to
In “Teaching and Studying Literature at the End of Ideology,” Ohmann cites Trilling’s recollections
of how students responded when confronted with the darkest recesses of modernism. According to Trilling,
students often responded “dutifully and gladly,” and “the Abyss has greeted them with the grave courtesy of all
objects of serious study, saying: ‘Interesting am I not? And exciting, if you consider how deep I am and what
dread beasts lie at my bottom. Have it well in mind that a knowledge of me contributes materially to your being
whole, or well-rounded, men’” (qtd. 107; see also Graff’s Professing Literature 232).
126
110
provide the sort of objective tests and tracking mechanisms that dominated the four-skills program at
Iowa State University that is described in McGrath’s collection. All incoming students were run
through a weeklong gamut of tests and were then prescribed a complex array of tracks, labs, and
clinics to treat their individual needs. The progressive tradition is better represented in the program at
Dewey’s former institution, Columbia University’s Teachers College. That program drew upon a set
of sources that included not only Dewey but the other pragmatists who provided a rich semiotic
framework that few progressive educators had really drawn upon: James, Peirce, Mead, and Morris as
well as Suzanne Langer. From these sources and work in structural linguistics, the program professed
to teach semiotic analyses of “scientific, social, and artistic symbols,” with short documentaries used
to help students relate symbolic interpretations to social interactions in the highly mediated urban
landscape (Grey 14). In this and other programs, one can see how structuralist linguistics served to
provide a model for studying mass communications, with semantics used to teach students to maintain
a critical disengagement from mass propaganda. The critical possibilities of such approaches were
muted by the blurring of social reconstructionist purposes into life adjustment models that is evident in
the “student-centered” program at Drake University. Rather than seeking to prepare students to
confront social problems, “the Reconstructionist school of educational thinking” at Drake was based
on the assumption that “each student is an environment,” and the teacher’s task is to help students
“adapt” to their individual potentials and needs (Dunn 89).
The communications movement was sometimes described as the “linguistic communications”
movement, and as such, it represents the broadest effort in history to apply linguistics to general
education. In the 1950s, linguistics was well on its way to defining itself as an “autonomous” science,
though even a decade later there were only fifteen separate departments (Joos 15). The rise of
linguistics was fueled by work with foreign languages during the war, and after it by America’s rise to
international dominance, with a related source of funding coming from evangelical efforts to codify
the languages of isolated peoples so that they could be converted. This internationalist orientation led
linguists to give more attention to applying their expertise to teaching English as a foreign language
(EFL) than to the challenges of bilingual education even though about 11% of Americans spoke
English as a second language in 1960.127 Teaching English to Speakers of Other Languages (TESOL)
helped coordinate the creation of twenty-two certificate programs by the end of the 1960s (see
Matsuda). According to Hymes and Fought, the postwar generation was really the first to “seek and
secure positions as linguists, not for their knowledges of langes” but for their distinctive
methodologies (64, 117). Those methods shifted from genealogical to structuralist models of the
“intersubjective objectivity” of linguistic systems, a shift that paralleled the progressive tendencies in
the communications movement (Hymes 311). Progressives had repudiated prescriptivist approaches to
teaching writing, and conservatives responded by condemniuagng the communications movement as
an alliance of permissive linguists and progressive educators who were unconcerned with maintaining
the standards of the literate culture (see de Mordaunt).
Such reactions played into the interdepartmental politics that brought an end to the
communications movement in the organization to which it gave its name, the Conference on College
Composition and Communication. CCCC was founded in 1949 by the NCTE after a joint conference
with the Speech Association on first-year composition and communications courses. Plenary speakers
included the leading figure in EFL, Harold B. Allen (who would become the first president of
TESOL). Speakers represented the innovative communications programs at Teachers College and
127
While some progressive schools had promoted linguistic pluralism, bilingual education largely
disappeared between the 1920s and the decade of the Bilingual Education Act in 1968 according to Andersson,
who cites research from the 1950s that found that on average, students with Hispanic surnames in Texas spent
three years in the first grade and usually dropped out before reaching the fifth grade. Such problems were not
taken up by work with English as a second language in English departments, for that work has generally had an
internationalist orientation that equated ESL with EFL and the teaching of “foreigners” (see Wilcox 60). In his
foreword to the proceedings of the first TESOL Conference, James Squire noted that resources were largely
going into EFL, while bilingual education was just beginning to gain attention. While the array of foreign service
and government agencies at the conference helps to explain that discontinuity, the continuing failure to connect
ESL with bilingual education can also be attributed to the marginalization of English education in English
departments.
111
Minnesota, but other communications courses seem to have amounted to little more than some
concepts from structural linguistics combined with semantic analyses of “mass medium of
communication.” For example, in his talk on English A at Northwestern, Wallace Douglas praised the
“linguistic communication” approach for giving students a “feeling for the ideals of scientific
humanism” (31, 26). Such positions helped justify the efforts of humanists to reclaim the “turf” of
first-year courses for literary studies, as Crowley and Heyda have discussed. The debates between
advocates of communications and composition in College Composition and Communication did
finally come down to the “control of the class hours” (Tuttle). English departments won that contest as
communications expanded its field of study into organizational and media studies. First-year
communications courses dwindled, and instruction shifted away from media studies and semiotics to
become more aligned with English departments’ opposition to the “increasing mechanization and
materialism of present day life,” especially the “colossus of modern technology” (Edman 17).128
As composition became consolidated as an area of work in English departments, and
linguistics began to be housed elsewhere (at least in leading research universities), some of the
concerns of communications courses became redefined by the conjunction of composition and
rhetoric. One of the “New Rhetoricians,” Richard Weaver, was the second speaker at the conference
that led to the establishment of CCCC. Speaking from a classical conception of rhetoric, he expressed
a traditional humanist’s disdain for composition courses that operate as “a service station” to provide
skills instruction in a “businesslike” manner (15). It had been arranged for James McCrimmon to
speak before Weaver, and McCrimmon used Weaver’s recently published College English article “To
Write the Truth” to castigate his absolutism before he even had a chance to speak. Weaver’s talk was
at odds with the functionalist stance that McCrimmon set out, and which the conference followed
through on. Weaver’s invocation of a Platonic conception of rhetoric is nonetheless notable, both
because his tenor was so discordant with the occasion, and because he gave classical rhetoric the pride
of place that it would gain as composition moved up to become an area of graduate study in the 1970s.
In contrast with the conservative assumptions of classicists such as Weaver, communications models
sought to advance progressive attempts to use “contemporary materials of local community life” to
teach “communication skills in varied mediums” (Shoemaker 243).
The founding of CCCC was an important step toward gaining professional recognition for
those who published on composition. As Goggin has discussed, the organization and its journal were
instrumental in building a research mission upon the teaching of composition. A later president of the
organization, David Bartholomae, characterized its role as providing teachers with a forum in which
they could play a different part from those professors who lectured on “an attenuated humanistic
tradition” to students who sat passively wondering how it related to their needs and goals (41). In the
early years, the organization was centered on improving the teaching of composition and the
workloads of those who taught it, including the challenges faced by community college faculty. The
organization held regular workshops on “The Status in the Profession of the Composition Teacher.” A
national survey by that title in 1953 reported that training was rarely provided because it was assumed
that composition was merely an “apprenticeship” that would be left behind by those who were capable
of rising to more rewarding work in literature. The rest were consigned to teach composition, lots of
composition. CCCC repeatedly called for revamping this job system. For example, as president of
CCCC in 1952, Don Allen visited forty-seven departments to ask chairs why they assumed that
literary studies “automatically” prepared one to teach composition. Allen reported that he received a
hostile response from those who assumed that only someone from education would think that teachers
The anti-technical reaction of humanists to the communications movement is included in McGrath’s
collection in the polemic of Norman Foerster, who haughtily noted that communications programs were not
headed by the “best minds” but by “educationists.” Their administrative mindset showed “an abnormal interest
in organization,” resulting in “incessant staff meetings” and stiflingly efforts to make a science of the art of
writing (202-3). Foerster lines up the points of opposition that humanist and leftist critics commonly use to
distance their concerns from composition by identifying it with a managerial mentality, vocational ethos, and
technological methods (see ***).
128
112
needed training. In most departments, such training was confined to a few staff meetings, though Allen
did find better support and workloads in the communications programs he visited.129
English departments’ approach to general education mirrored the workings of the stratified
educational market by exploiting the efforts of broader classes of teachers, and enabling a select few to
demonstrate their worth in its terms and thereby rise to positions of privilege. The rest were then left to
do the basic work that provided the institutional legitimization for the prevailing hierarchies. This
professional economy was consolidated by making composition into an area of managerial expertise,
and by creating methods for literary studies that could be upheld as research, while also doing double
duty as an efficient means to handle class work. These developments were consistent with trends in
other disciplines. A rich set of contrasts is provided by Bender and Schorske’s American Academic
Culture in Transformation: Fifty Years, Four Disciplines, which includes analyses and reflections of
prominent figures in economics, English, political science, and philosophy. In each field, the 1950s
saw a transition away from questioning first principles to concentrate on formal methods, as evident
not just in New Criticism but also in the turn from pragmatism in philosophy and the turn to
behaviorism in economics and political science. At the “end of ideology,” each discipline settled down
to refine its methods with what promised to be unending funding (Bender and Schorske 32). As
Bender and Schorske note with some surprise, all the contributors to the collection ignore the impact
of broader social movements and discuss their disciplines as autonomous and self-authoring. Such a
stance is not really surprising because turning a blind eye on the social forces at work in a discipline
enables insiders to presume that they have justly earned their rewards, while looking at a discipline
from farther afield challenges traditional intellectuals to consider the ends that their efforts serve.130
English Education in the “Golden Age” of the Profession
A dramatic sense of what class work looked like from the other side of the podium is provided
by Leslie Fiedler’s “On Remembering Freshman Comp” in 1962. Fiedler’s essay on his class as a
freshman composition student was the lead article in a special issue of College Composition and
Communication on “The Experience of Freshman English.” That issue echoes with a fading sense of
the “experience curriculum” as inflected by a sixties sense of experience. Looking back to taking a
composition class in 1938 in a New York University classroom, Fielder remembered sitting beside
others whose speech betrayed the Yiddish rhythms of their homes: “here or nowhere our
(approximately) Anglo-Saxon mentors had decided, we would be convinced we spoke a common
tongue with them: a language capable of uttering only the most correctly tepid Protestant banalities no
matter what stirred in our alien innards.” Fiedler describes how his class was berated by his
Midwestern TA, who paused in the middle of his insults to explain his sarcasms. Fielder imagined that
the TA wanted to ensure that his students felt the sort of biting humiliation he had been subjected to by
his own professors. Six years after this rite of passage, Fiedler himself stepped up to the podium to
teach composition as a graduate student at Wisconsin. Fiedler sardonically remembered teaching from
mimeographed copies of the communications theories that S.I. Hayakawa had distilled from the works
of Alfred Korzbski. Few descriptions of first-year composition capture its transcultural politics more
richly than Fiedler’s description of how an “urban Jew” ended up teaching English to Midwestern
129
Allen found that TAs and new PhDs could readily assess what preparation they needed, if
departments bothered to ask them. From their responses, he recommended graduate instruction in higher
education (including general education, teaching in community colleges, and the pragmatics of being a
professor), research on learning (assessment, classroom strategies, and cognition), language (including standard
usage and language acquisition), reading theory, the teaching of literature, and recent innovations in high school
curricula, first-year composition, and “rhetorical theory” (including semantics and practical reasoning) (10-12).
130
With a career that reached back to the 1930s, M.H. Abrams was selected to assess trends in English.
Its professional autonomy had been set out in Abrams’s milestone The Mirror and the Lamp, which places the
formalism of New Criticism at the end of history. Aesthetics is seen to have evolved from “mimetic” and
“pragmatic” theories through “expressive” paradigms to conclude with the “objective” theories of New
Criticism. Abrams plots this development using the semiotic model of the communication triangle, with I.A.
Richards and Richard McKeon cited as authorities. Rhetoric is identified as the classical source of the
“pragmatic” concern for audience responses. Literary critics’ disdain for pragmatism is evident in how Abrams
reviews “pragmatic” aesthetics without feeling any need to cite the best-known American philosopher of the
twentieth century, the pragmatist John Dewey.
113
farmers through the semantic theories propounded by a Polish engineer and popularized by a Japanese
immigrant (who went on to become a Senator and a leading proponent of English-only initiatives).
The ironies at issue are compounded by the fact that Fiedler’s cutting recollection is followed by an
article by Hayakawa himself in which he blithely details how first-year semantics courses move
students beyond provincial commonplaces to acquire a cosmopolitan mindset.
Fiedler was one of more iconoclastic figures to gain professional prominence in the “golden
age” of the research university. From the start of his career, he adopted the position of an outsider in
works such as What Was Literature? Success came readily to his generation. The demand for faculty
far outstripped production. Only one quarter of new English professors had PhDs in 1960, as
compared to one third in 1953 (Grommon). The enrollment pressures had a leveling effect, with two
thirds of faculty teaching some composition, and many teaching mostly composition (Kelly;
Weingarten, et al.). Teachers of composition called for research to meet the needs of the diverse
students who made it into college in the 1960s as a result of the fourfold increase in federal aid. With
the end of segregation, students of color rose to become 8.4% of enrollments by 1971 (Andersen;
Christopher Lucas). More traditional professors responded to such trends by calling for the abolition
of composition as a distraction from the higher purposes of departments’ rising aspirations. With a
confidence buoyed by increasing enrollments, the Chair of Freshman English at the University of
Michigan proposed eliminating composition, despite his acknowledgment that it accounted for most of
his department’s enrollments. If composition could be dispensed with, his department would be able to
quit hiring teachers who dragged down its reputation because they “have not published much,”
including faculty in English education who work with local schools (Steinhoff 25). Despite the general
attitude that education was a distraction to the profession, over ninety percent of PhDs in English were
becoming educators—more than in any other field (Allen). Such attitudes disoriented aspiring
departments from exploiting the booming educational economy to claim professional support for
teachers. At no time in its history did the discipline have a better opportunity to improve the standing
of the nearly one million English teachers working in American schools (Squire, “English”). In 1965,
half of all first-year college students wanted to become teachers, and twelve percent hoped to teach in
college.131 More students chose English than any other major because it seemed to promise the sort of
opportunities most students cited when surveyed about they wanted from their life’s work—the
opportunity to help others while also being “original and creative” (Andersen 102-3).
An historic opportunity to restructure the field of work came in the 1960s when millions of
dollars in federal funding were secured to improve the teaching of English. Those resources were used
to articulate an integrated vision that bridged schools and colleges.132 NCTE and MLA first attempted
to secure major foundation grants with conferences on “Basic Issues in the Teaching of English” in
1958, and then in 1961 NCTE followed up to gain federal funding with The National Interest and the
Teaching of English.133 In response to the question “What is English?” the Basic Issues Conferences
defined the discipline as a “sequential and cumulative” program of study in literature, language, and
composition. While this “triad” in principle centered on literature, it was estimated that in practice new
professors spent about 90% of their early years teaching composition, while graduate programs had
131
Such aspirations were still shaped by the jobs available to women, within higher education and
elsewhere. A study of the careers of PhDs granted at Harvard and Radcliffe in the 1950s found that 32% of men
and 20% of women went on to teach in “major” universities, with 30.2% of women and 12.3% of men staying at
the instructor rank, which in English departments meant teaching composition (Grommon 485).
132
In addition to gaining federal funding for research on the discipline, NCTE also set up a national
writing competition in 1958 in which 2300 students submitted essays, with the incentive being that the NCTE
would help to secure grants for college. $852,000 was raised in the first year according to The National Interest
and the Teaching of English (Squire). These initiatives provided the collaborative networks that were used in the
national surveys of curricula that were undertaken in the 1960s, 1970s, and 1980s that are discussed in later
sections (see, for example, Squire and Applebee, and Applebee’s “Record,” Survey, Contexts, and Literature).
133
Working from his background as a linguist, Marckwardt tried to bridge the two cultures of NCTE and
MLA. He reported that leaders of MLA had a “touching innocence about education” and responded with
“anguished groans” to NCTE publications (8). According to Marckwardt, the participants at the conferences
were only able to maintain unanimity by not raising troubling questions about whether “literature should be
taught at all” in an era of “newer media of communication” (10). Such agreements were only possible, according
to Markwardt, because “educationalists” were “blackballed” and New Criticism had passed “its zenith” (9, 10).
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almost no courses “dealing primarily with language and rhetoric” (Squire, National 9). To gain public
support, The National Interest argued for the economic benefits of improving literacy (Squire,
National 23). The “startling deficiencies” in teacher preparation were the “greatest single weakness,”
and they arose in part from a lack of “articulation” with schools (Squire, National 47, 33). The report
promised to address this need and cited research showing that doubling school writing assignments
reduced student failures by two thirds. Statistics were enlisted to demonstrate that improving writing
instruction would save ten million dollars a year—the costs of providing remedial writing courses to
twenty percent of all first-year college students (Squire, National 92-3, 113). The report concluded
with a pitch to allow English to compete for the funds going to the social and natural sciences under
the National Defense Education Act of 1958, which in the wake of Sputnik had concentrated on math,
science, and technologies of instruction. On this and points, one can see how the discipline tried to
rearticulate the distinction between content disciplines and teaching methods that had enabled English
professors to distance their humanistic concerns from teacher preparation, but which had also come to
undercut their ability to claim resources for work with new technologies and public education.
The Education Commission set aside $400,000 in 1961 to improve reading, writing, and
speaking skills. With a couple million dollars more in 1962, “Project English” followed up on the
National Interest proposals to set up teams of professors and teachers to work with schools in teacher
institutes and regional curriculum centers to develop an “integrated English program” (“Project
English” 40). According to Erwin Steinberg, the second Coordinator of Project English, twelve
curriculum centers were established, including one at Teachers College, where “comparative linguistic
and cultural studies” were applied to teaching ESL to multilingual speakers. Another center at Hunter
College developed the noted “Gateway English” program for students in “urban slums” (Steinberg,
Curriculum 58). Gateway English was a rare effort to get English professors involved with
impoverished schools to respond to the view that literature was “suspect” because its study excluded
the traditions of people of color (Steinberg, Curriculum 52). Before the creation of the National
Writing Project in 1974, Project English was the only national program to enlist professors in
collaborations with teachers in summer institutes and collaborative research to design curricula to meet
the developmental needs of students. These materials provided a coordinated, research-based attempt
to work through the possibilities of new linguistic models and advance the rising interest in rhetoric
and writing and follow up on the research on the teaching of literature that Richards and Rosenblatt
had helped to initiate. For an all too brief period, Project English provided resources to build
disciplinary collaborations with the schools that bridged the boundaries of literature, linguistics,
writing studies, and English education.
One research study funded by Project English was Braddock, Lloyd-Jones, and Shoer’s
landmark Research in Written Composition, which reviewed several thousand empirical studies to
establish scientific principles for the teaching of writing. Research in Written Communication has been
cited as one of the two studies that mark 1963 as the beginning of modern research on composition,
according to Stephen North.134 The other was Kitzhaber’s Themes, Theories, and Therapy: Teaching
Writing in College, which took its title from the confused array of composition programs that
Kitzhaber surveyed. With funding from the Carnegie Foundation, Kitzhaber reviewed syllabi from
ninety-five institutions and conducted an in-depth study of student writing at one institution—
Dartmouth. While he used quite traditional measures, Kitzhaber found that writing did indeed improve
in the first year, but then it declined because little writing was assigned after first-year composition
even in an elite institution such as Dartmouth. The basic structure of composition seems to have
become fairly consistent with the fading of communications (which was still found in six institutions,
though half of those were seen to be moribund). While remedial courses were declining, they were
enrolling about fifteen percent of students in half of the programs. Approximately seventy-five percent
of students were placed into standard composition courses, with about eighty percent of those courses
beginning with personal narratives. The first semester was commonly devoted to language study and
the second to literature (though one quarter focused the second course on rhetoric or logic). In addition
to “a lot of impromptu writing” (to limit plagiarism), eleven essays were commonly written in the first
134
Another historic event in 1963 was the Toward a New Rhetoric CCCC Convention, which included
Booth’s “The Rhetorical Stance” and other noted papers by Kitzhaber, Christensen, and Corbett that were
published in the October 1963 issue of CCC.
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semester and ten in the second, including a research paper (25). Kitzhaber concluded that a common
theoretical paradigm was needed to reduce the “bewildering” range of aims and methods. Other than
“a desiccated rhetorical doctrine,” Kitzhaber found no conceptual coherence in the handbooks and
anthologies used in the programs (16). The lack of a unifying conceptual vision for composition
studies undercut varied aspects of English studies, as is evident in Kitzhaber’s recommendations that
improving the course depended upon changing teacher assignments and training, broadening graduate
and undergraduate curricula, and reassessing the teaching of reading and writing.
These and other attempts to expand collaborations among teachers and professors were often
guided by the idea that structuralism was about to lead to major advances in teaching. However,
structuralism gave rise to a dizzying array of generative and transformational models that left those
arguing for broader studies of linguistics lamely trying to justify a discipline that could not seem to
agree upon its basic elements, and often dismissed its practical applications (see Sledd’s “Plea for
Pluralism” and Fries’s “Advances”; also Crowley’s “Linguistics” and Faigley 80-4). Just as it was
being left behind in linguistics, structuralism was generating models of learning and literacy that were
having an interdisciplinary impact. Brunner’s “spiral curriculum” provided the model that Project
English proponents used to articulate the methods and “principles of order” that set out to structure
English studies as a unified field (Kitzhaber, “Rage” 1218).135 As in the communications movement,
structural linguistics provided categories for making sense of social conventions that had been called
into question by a “communications revolution” that deepened anxieties among “literary people” that
new media were threatening to create a “standardized mass society” (Muller 8). “Mediation” was set
out as a distinctive concern of structuralism in Hartman’s “Structuralism: The Anglo-American
Adventure,” which reviewed how structuralism had shifted the focus of study from texts to contexts by
popularizing the idea that “societies are systems” (149). Structuralism’s guiding concern for systems
of signification became unsustainable with the transition from structuralism to poststructuralism. At
the conclusion of the noted Yale Colloquium in 1966, J. Hillis Miller observed that the antinomies of
structuralism “melt into each other,” and are therefore meaningless apart from the system of
signification that is set up to establish a presumed set of differentiations (562).136
In the same year that J. Hillis Miller characterized structuralism in terms that would postdate
it, a three-week conference of fifty American and British educators was held at Dartmouth that is
commonly identified as a signature event for the emergence of the process model in composition
studies. Kitzhaber opened the conference with a talk entitled “What is English?” He assumed that this
question had been fully answered by the integrated and cumulative models developed by Project
English. James Britton responded by shifting the basic focus from what English should be to what
students should be doing. What that shift, the discussion took on a process orientation that the
American participants had not anticipated. This basic shift in focus proved to have tremendous
generative power when Dixon’s account of the conference, Growth through English, popularized what
came to be known as the “personal growth” model. That model had so many striking continuities with
progressives’ efforts to organize curricula around students’ experiences that it is ironic that the model
was rearticulated through British sources. Kitzhaber never did understand how the “neoProgressivism” of Dartmouth was able to revive process models that he identified with “life
adjustment” units on “understanding our neighbors.” However, he did recognize that the British were
reacting against a school system that was “dominated” by state examinations that stratified schools by
the class of student attending them (1216; see also Mullen 12-13). American researchers such as
Kitzhaber were trying to institute a structured field of work within a disjointed educational system,
135
With linguistics as a model and the learning of sciences as his focus, Bruner maintained that the
“principles that give structure” to a subject determine how it is to be learned. Once the “mental structure of a
field of knowledge” is determined, “uneconomical” modes of instruction can be avoided, and efficient
acquisitions can be made (31-32). This model represented learning as a mode of collaborative inquiry, and
thereby captured the excitement associated with the process of scientific discovery. This model enhanced the
professional credibility of teachers, though Harris identifies it with a “top-down” conception of the transmission
of knowledge that he maintains was characteristic of Project English, as does Smagorinsky.
136
The emergence of poststructuralism is generally dated from another conference in 1966, the Johns
Hopkins Conference on the Languages of Criticism and the Sciences of Man: The Structuralist Controversy,
where Derrida delivered his famous “Structure, Sign, and Play in the Discourse of the Human Sciences.”
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while Dixon, Britton, Moffett, and others appealed to British teachers who worked within a much
more regulated system. The British “neo-Progressives” captured the spirit of the 60s by noting that
“learners are born free, but are everywhere in chains” (Dixon 111). According to Harris’s insightful
analysis in “After Dartmouth,” the content-centered model of Project English was swept aside by an
engaging vision of composition as a “teaching subject” that challenged research hierarchies by
locating the making of knowledge in classroom transactions (634).
American educators viewed the politics of the discipline differently because American
education did not have content-based standards to unify the schools and college, while British
reformers were attempting to move English studies away from a more academic model of the
discipline. British figures such as James Britton maintained that English should be about “experience
rather than knowledge,” in part because they recognized that the working class experience had been
devalued by the culture of schooling (87).137 The tracking of “culturally different” students was
discussed at Dartmouth, but according to the American appointed to publish an account of the
conference, Herbert Muller, the matter was not resolved because “the trouble remains that these
youngsters are in fact backward” (29). While American participants were nervous about what Muller
termed the “revolt of Negroes,” American education was not seen to suffer “the social inequality that
had long dominated British education” (25). Muller noted that Americans generally believed in “the
democratic fallacy—the popular notion that all middle-class Americans are properly entitled” to a
college “education whether or not they have the intellectual capacity for it” (31-32). In stating that
“fallacy” in those terms, Muller aptly characterized the American tendency to assume that “all middleclass Americans” includes virtually all Americans. American education was not seen to be classless by
other reformers. In his article surveying the changes between the Basic Issues Conferences in 1958
and the Dartmouth Conference in 1966, Marckwardt noted that “the rediscovery of the American
lower class” was disabusing educators of the notion that “we were simply one vast and relatively
undifferentiated middle class” (10-11). Progressivists’ concerns about the class politics of American
education were reemerging. From their national survey of high schools, Squire and Applebee
concluded that “the most pressing failing” of curricula was the lack of attention to the experience of
students in the “lower tracks” (30), while the editor of English Journal responded to repeated requests
for advice on teaching “culturally disadvantaged” students by openly acknowledging that tracking
ended up stratifying students by their “socio-economic background” (Burton 14).
One area where American and British class politics had a differing impact on English studies
was in creative writing. Dixon and other American advocates of personal growth such as James
Moffett and Donald Murray emphasized “creative expression” in ways that have been criticized for
demarcating the personal from the political (see Berthoff’s “The Problem”; and Berlin’s Rhetoric and
Reality). This criticism is well founded and can be extended back to the reader-response theories of
Louise Rosenblatt. On the other hand, in valuing the generative capacities of students’ individual
experience, Rosenblatt’s transactional model can also be seen as “a humanistic alternative to the
excesses of close reading” (Clifford 38). Such alternatives were shaped by the differing class
experiences in American and British classrooms. In 1968 Dixon identified self-expression and
classroom dramatizations of daily life as strategies for enabling working-class children to connect with
their home cultures and regional dialects (99; see also Muller 32). Expressive writing is given primacy
in Britton’s influential “Writing to Learn and Learning to Write” (with the culturalist perspective of
Sapir cited as a guiding authority). However, Britton’s theories look to social transactions as the ends
of discourse in ways that are broader than the “interior view” adopted by American “expressionists”
137
At Dartmouth and other international conferences in the 1960s, British and Canadian participants
pointedly argued that working-class students deserved more than humanistic verities and vocational instruction
(see Spouge; Buxton). British educational politics had their most farreaching impact on college English in the
founding of the Centre for Cultural Studies at Birmingham University in 1964. As Stuart Hall has discussed, the
Centre’s founder, Richard Hoggart, authored his account of working-class cultural literacy, The Uses of Literacy,
as an extension of his experience teaching working adults. As Hall notes, the other two founding texts of British
cultural studies were shaped by the articulation work that Raymond Williams and E.P. Thompson did in the
1950s. As in America, such articulation efforts were ignored by disciplinary specialists at Birmingham, who
were working to raise their standing in the same ways as land-grant American universities. For a comparison of
how literary intellectuals in Britain and America responded to the class politics of mass culture, see Lunn.
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such as Donald Murray (see, for example, Murray’s “Teach Writing as a Process”). Whatever their
limitations, such efforts to foster cross-fertilizations among studies of literature and writing
contributed to the pedagogical popularity of creative writing, which in the 1950s had been seen as a
distraction from the formal mastery of content.138 At the college level, in the 1960s creative writing
became a national movement—a “minor commercial phenomena” that traditionalists saw as a rather
“shabby” business only “remotely” related to literary studies (Freedman 128). As those relations
became better instituted, the pedagogical uses of creative writing came to be looked down upon by
those who did not see student writing as having the creative capacities of literature.
The pedagogical continuities between creative writing and composition in the 1960s had the
same sort of potential that the communications movement had in the 1950s—the potential to shift the
structural framework for the discipline (see Gallagher and Mayers ). That potential was complicated
by the renewal of interest in rhetoric in composition studies. That interest is documented by works
such as The New Rhetorics, which gathered popular articles into an emerging canon of categories and
concerns. The lead piece was Booth’s “Revival of Rhetoric,” which set out the sense of the time that
something historic was beginning to take hold in the field. One of the historical trends that the
collection aptly documents is the assumption that structural linguistics provided the expertise that
would renew rhetoric by offering generative models of communications, as discussed in the chapters
by Ohmann, Young and Becker, Christensen, Sledd, and others. This faith in the promise of
structuralism would prove to be less generative than the rediscovery of rhetorical invention. Classical
strategies for exploring what was assumed in varied domains provided heuristics that proved to be
very useful in making sense of the explosion of knowledge that gave rise to intertextual models of
reading and writing.139 However, rhetoric was not well positioned to break down the divide that had
been set up by polarizing writing studies into the truly creative and merely technical. That opposition
was overlaid on the disciplinary assumption that the creative nature of literature writing and literary
study set them above methodical concerns. From such a perspective, a rhetorical conception of
techniques of invention appeared to be an oxymoron, insofar as inventive processes were by their
nature unmethodical, and therefore largely unteachable. The alliance of rhetoric with teaching of
composition and structural linguistics only confirmed its irrelevance to creative writing.
Such attitudes had a divisive impact at a historical juncture of considerable significance. The
rediscovery of the art of invention was part of a workshop approach to teaching that opened up
generative capabilities at the same time that the discipline was expanding its structural capacities. An
expansive survey of the field at the end of the 1960s is provided by Lois Josephs and Erwin
Steinberg’s English Education Today. This collection introduced teachers to a field of expansive
possibilities with surveys of high school curricula, an excerpt from Brunner’s structuralist paradigm,
materials from Project English centers and Basic Issues conferences, and articles following up on
Dartmouth to discuss how to teach creative reading and writing. Curricula for the “talented” and
“disadvantaged” are included along with writings by Cleanth Brooks and Neil Postman, Kitzhaber and
Dixon, and Rosenblatt and Braddock to provide teachers with a wide-ranging but integrated view of
the field. This field of vision documented the historic possibilities that were opening up to teachers.
The collection shows how the formalism of the 1950s had been replaced by a process-oriented
approach, not only in the teaching of writing and generative linguistics but also in transactional
approaches to literature. These approaches acknowledged that “underprivileged” students were not
culturally deprived but politically oppressed. This expanding awareness was vital because the
formalist presuppositions of traditional models of content mastery prevented practitioners from
138
Squire and Applebee document the broad resurgence of interest in creative writing in the 1960s, with
two thirds of students in one survey citing creative writing as the best way they knew to improve writing (129).
Such responses validated the position of Britton and others that “children learn to write above all by writing,”
and “what is important is that children in school should write about what matters to them to someone who
matters to them” (52, 53). These points were basic to progressive education, but that continuity was rarely cited
because progressives were held in disrepute, in part because of the “the creative writing binge” in the 1930s
(Hook, “Teaching” 97).
139
On the other side of the divide between the arts and sciences, rhetoric was being revitalized as a
school of criticism, with Black’s neo-Aristotelian Rhetorical Criticism becoming the “single most important
influence on rhetorical studies” in speech and communications for the “next several decades” (Leff 87).
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coming to terms with the critical potentials of the social experiences of broader classes of students.
Those formalist presuppositions have historically exacerbated the oppressive workloads that have been
imposed on teachers of gateway courses. As I will discuss in the next section, content-mastery
approaches to teaching have tended to concentrate class time on formal instruction in literature,
writing, and grammar. Very little time is left for workshopping writing, or reading. By default, writing
ends up being the work left to be done at the end of the day. Teachers are left to spend their “free”
time commenting on papers after students have completed their writing on their own. 140 This “process
of teaching writing by correction—or instruction after the fact and after the act”—would prove to be
particularly debilitating in confronting the collaborative capacities of the interactive technologies that
began to redefine literacy in the 1960s (Roger Applebee 14).
The Crisis in Literacy and Literary Studies in the 1970s
The historical potentials of the articulation efforts of the 1960s take on clearer significance
when contrasted with the “uses of bad publicity” against the discipline in the culture wars of the 1970s
and 80s (Graff). At the same time that the profession was confronted with a collapse in majors and
jobs, it faced public assaults on its credibility and a back to basics movement that undercut its
educational base. The number of graduates with majors in English was cut in half (from 63,976 in
1972 to 32,541 in 1980). Doctorates followed a parallel drop (from 1412 in 1973 to 714 in 1983), and
in 1969 “the job market changed suddenly and completely,” leaving few tenure-track positions and
lots of work for overloaded composition teachers (Wilcox 11). Part of the disabling discontinuity
between that work and those positions had been set out by discipline itself. The profession had long
ignored the fact that many undergraduate and most graduate students will teach. The pressures to
attend to that fact were contained within a job system that downloaded the most challenging teaching
onto paraprofessionals, technical colleges, and service courses. If the profession had confronted those
challenges, they might not have grown to crisis proportions. As noted by John Fisher, when the bottom
first dropped out of the job market, professional leaders were slow to react because those in
“distinguished departments” could afford to ignore such trends.141 As the crisis deepened, some
leaders began to call for redefining the field in terms of literacy studies, but the same forces that
pressed for reform also stiffened resistance to it.
Those forces are most evident in the back to basics movement that sought to reestablish a
respect for literate conventions at an elemental level. Access to education had expanded, and many
homes had more televisions than toilets. Print was about to be transformed by the “personal”
computer, which Apple began selling in 1977. The anxieties of the time made for front-page homilies
such as Newsweek’s “Why Johnny Can’t Write?” in 1975. The lack of respect for traditional
conventions was blamed on permissive educators who had failed to maintain discipline (see Faigley
61-6). The back to basics movement gave rise to the first wave of high-stakes testing initiatives that
undercut teachers’ professional autonomy by pressing them to teach to tests of minimum
competencies, which were imposed on thirty-eight state systems by 1985 (see Apple). A Nation at Risk
in 1983 was one of several clarion statements by Reagan administration figures seeking to establish
their political standing by attacking progressive educators for a “homogenized, diluted, and diffused”
curriculum that imposed an “unthinking, unilateral educational disarmament.” Declines in SAT scores
and increases in the “functionally illiterate” provided all the proof that was needed that the public had
become “scientifically and technologically illiterate.” These literacy campaigns worked to reinforce
the anxieties of white middle-class males about affirmative action, economic decline, and a loss of
public respect for their values. Such anxieties had often been invoked to expand support for public
education, but in the 1980s, they were used to justify its privatization. A Nation at Risk cited Gallup
polls that showed education was still viewed by most Americans as a higher funding priority than
national defense. Those priorities shifted decisively in the Regan era. Higher education came to be
Arthur Applebee’s Survey of Teaching Conditions in 1978 cites research estimating that it took a
teacher 3.5 minutes to assign a grade to a 250 word paper, and 8.6 minutes to comment upon higher order skills.
Given that formula, a teacher with 125 students would take 17.5 hours to comment upon a weekly theme. In
reality, many teachers had more students and less time than that.
141
According to McLeod’s “Watching Our Discipline Die” (1980), the profession showed not “much
concern and almost no alarm” when the number of lecturers doubled in the California State System in the 1970s.
140
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represented more as a private benefit and less as a public duty, resulting in a shift in funding from
public grants to personal loans and the elimination of many access and research programs established
to make public education more responsive to the experiences of under-served populations.
In retrospect, we can see that literacy was not so much declining as diversifying as
commentators began to use the term “literacies” to refer to professional, scientific and technological
skills. Literacy became pluralized in discussions of the need to provide workers with the technical
skills needed to compete in the global economy. The impact of new economies and technologies of
literacy is documented by such studies as the National Adult Literacy Survey, which came to define
literacy as about something more than the ability to read. Such surveys expanded definitions of
“literacy” to include “document” and “quantitative” literacies that encompassed the abilities to
interpret texts and process information to solve technical problems. As discussions expanded still
further to include “information literacy” and “computer literacy,” literacy began to change much faster
than literacy studies, in part because the emphasis on minimum standards and basic skills undermined
the transactional approaches to literacy and learning that were needed to address the demands and
potentials of interactive technologies of literacy. This lag is evident in Arthur Applebee’s surveys of
curricula, textbooks, and instructional practices in 1984 and 1993. Applebee found that three quarters
of English classes continued to be devoted to talking about literature, with the teacher doing most of
the talking. “Discussions” of literature tended to be recitations of readings of isolated texts in the
outmoded manner of New Criticism, leaving little time for work with writing (Literature in the
Secondary School 50). Teachers served primarily as examiners of writing, which was “more likely to
be assessed than. . . taught” (Contexts 184). Applebee’s studies also show that there was no cause to
worry that the classics were being pushed aside by multiculturalism. About the only classic to lose
standing was Silas Mariner. In fact, of the fifty most assigned books in the 1980s, only one was by a
woman and two by minority writers (Literature 82).
Attacks on multiculturalism were clearly a response to expansions in educational access, and
such reactions were successful to a significant degree, not just in rolling back affirmative action but in
broadly reducing the access of poorer students.142 While the more women than men began attending
higher education in the 1980s, the access of lower-class students to upper-class institutions decreased
after 1975 as costs outstripped grants, and grants shifted from needs-based to merit-based criteria in
response to middle-class anxieties about being priced out of the best schools (see Karen; Garcia, et al;
and Faigley 248). In 1975 the maximum Pell Grant covered 84% of the costs of an average public
four-year institution (and only 38% of a private institution). Twenty years later, the largest available
Pell Grant paid only 34% of the costs of a typical public institution (and 13% of a private one). This
change was compounded by the income disparities that expanded in the Regan-Bush era. An average
public four-year institution cost 42% of the income of those coming from the poorest third of families
in 1972, while in 1992 that same institution cost such families 62% of their annual income. Those in
the richest third saw no such proportional increase, with the cost of a public institution remaining
stable at 7% of their family incomes (Garcia, et al. 7). While the percentage of high school graduates
attending college rose from 51% in 1975 to 62% two decades later, the period saw an historic
“political mobilization by dominant groups to maintain their relative exclusivity in elite higher
education” (Karen 194).143 In these ways, widened access worked in concert with deepening
142
The coordinated media assault on progressive educators is evident in the bestseller standing of one of
the best-known statements of the culture wars, Bloom’s The Closing of the American Mind: How Higher
Education Has Failed Democracy and Impoverished the Souls of Today’s Students. The book was first listed on
the New York Times Bestseller lists even when there were only 10,000 copies of the book in print and only 7,000
had been distributed. As Davidson notes, “no one, in retrospect, quite understands how a title could be listed as a
bestseller when there were not enough copies in print to qualify it for that status” (20).
143
Working with the National Education Longitudinal sample of students attending eighth grade in 1988
and other large representative samples, Karen provides an analysis of educational access that controls for class
background, race, test scores, and grades. This analysis shows that African Americans were being tracked into
less prestigious institutions, while the access of Hispanics and women to elite institutions was shaped mostly by
class, particularly the income and education of parents. Of course neither grades nor test scores can really be
considered independent variables in analyses of the effects of race, class, and gender on access.
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stratification to increase the numbers of poor and minority students in college, and to track those
students into less prestigious institutions.
The stratification of higher education and the diversification of literacy and the literate were
compounded by the differentiation of disciplines to undermine the standing of the humanities in ways
that conservatives effectively exploited. In the 1960s many universities raised their profiles by
expanding their research efforts. In the 1970s and 80s, federal funding for basic research began a
steady decline in real dollars outside defense-related areas, with particularly marked decreases in
funding for research on education and social issues. Unlike the post-Sputnik era of Project English,
public anxieties were not translated into increased public funding for education. The prevailing
political forces promoted the idea that educators had wasted the resources that had been given to them.
Decreases in funding for instruction increased entrepreneurial efforts to deploy university resources to
develop business “partnerships.” Between 1980 and 1984 such initiatives resulted in the establishment
of some two hundred projects just in the area of biotechnology, yielding over $335 million a year in
licenses and patents by 1996 (A.M. Cohen 415). These trends resulted in marked increases in the
salary differentials for fields where the indirect costs of research yielded funds not vested in the
instructional infrastructure. This internal divesture in the humanities was compounded by an historic
shift in the professional classes away from the “humanistic” idealism of the 1960s as the pressing
social concerns shifted from social and cultural issues to economic anxieties that helped justify state
divestures in public institutions (Brint 14). These shifts helped redefine the priorities of students: in
1970 only 39% of students stated that they had come to college to become “very well off financially,”
but by 1987 77% were selecting that purpose as a primary life goal (Faigley 247). These shifts also
helped shape conflicts within the profession. Unfortunately, leftists and traditionalists have both
attributed the humanities’ loss of influence to vocational attitudes without giving much attention to
how the discipline might have intervened in the political and institutional forces at work.144
Such reactions help to explain why the basic changes in literacy that were emerging at this
time did not bring broader reforms in literacy studies. A detailed portrait of the field before the crash
in jobs and majors is provided by the surveys that had been undertaken to find ways to handle the
tripling of majors in the 1960s—a decade soon looked back upon as a “golden time” (Kellogg).
Allen’s The PhD in English and American Literature documented the rise of PhD programs, which
increased over fifty percent in the 1960s, from 81 in 1960 to 124 in 1969. Burgeoning doctoral
programs established the research profiles of departments in state colleges seeking to raise their
standing.145 Allen’s study was sponsored by MLA with foundation funding to examine why doctorates
were taking an average of ten years in English—more than in any other field (with six years the
average in the humanities). ABDs were apparently fanning out from doctoral departments to meet the
demand for instructors, with about half of all doctoral students not completing their degrees. Allen
concluded that “colleges depend for their teaching staffs on ABD’s and teachers not yet that far
advanced” (83). Allen noted that the discipline was even more culpable because it had not trained
those teachers for the work they were doing, and hiring procedures did not include any attempt to
document the quality of that work (117, 79; see also Wilcox 30).146 Allen called upon professors to
According to Guillory, the “failure to install the standard vernacular at lower levels” led to the rising
importance of composition as a means to credential the “professional-managerial classes” (79; see also Godzich
12). The teaching of writing is also identified as a vocational accommodation in the 2002 ADE Committee on
the Major, especially in its remarkably reactionary comments on the “transparently populist and egalitarian”
affirmative action initiatives that led to the spread of remedial writing (77). The ADE report looks to increasing
“selectivity” to uphold the discipline’s literary orientation against vocationally minded students who are
unprepared to appreciate the higher purposes of the profession.
145
These aspirations are evident in the shift in the largest English graduate programs: from 1955 to 1965
the top ten producers included an almost equal number of private and state universities (Allen 19-20), but in the
1970s state universities in North Carolina, Oregon, Texas, and New York rose to join the top ten, with the only
private university left among the ten largest programs being Yale (MLA-ADE Survey of Doctoral Programs
1973). The research priorities of such programs had a broad impact because the ten largest programs produced
45% of all doctorates from 1955-1965, and their graduates were recruited by more broadly based institutions
seeking to raise their standing.
146
As Grommon notes, this problem was systemic: until “American higher education provides effective
incentives for teaching, proposals to alter the degree program so as to produce better schoolmasters are at best
144
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“face the fact that society has always supported them because they are teachers,” but his study shows
that the profession was already structured as a pyramid with a large base of lowly paid instructors
handling the most labor-intensive courses (89). Nonetheless, through the sixties most faculty entered
the profession through its base, and thereby gained at least a passing familiarity with the challenges
posed by introductory courses. This pattern shifted in the 1970s as beleaguered departments
downloaded composition courses onto a caste of teachers with far fewer chances of moving up to
positions within the profession.
The deepening dependence on teachers without professional benefits or opportunities was
compounded by the tendency to look down upon education as a service function, as is documented by
Wilcox’s Anatomy of College English. Wilcox’s study provides particularly timely benchmarks
because the crash in jobs and majors came between the beginning of his survey of four-year
departments in 1967 and its publication in 1973.147 As with Allen’s study, the problems that Wilcox
surveyed were changing as he examined them. Wilcox perceived that rising enrollments would finally
make it possible to eliminate “that monster, freshman English,” which accounted for forty percent of
all enrollments (ix). However, hopes to eliminate such courses receded when enrollments dropped and
departments came to depend upon composition to avoid “decimation” (Hunter 2; see also Simeone).
Wilcox was surprised to find that “few if any major renovations” had been implemented in majors
since the 1930s because he perceived that curricula had long lacked any basic coherence (156).
English departments commonly offered a hodgepodge of courses without any cumulative sequencing,
with sophomores commonly taking a “masterworks” course, an advanced composition course, and
sometimes a public speaking course. Then students moved through overlapping courses that did not
follow any logical sequence, including uncoordinated surveys of British and American literature,
genre courses such as “Modern Poetry,” period courses such as the “Romantic Movement,” and
courses on individual writers, most commonly Chaucer, Shakespeare, and Milton. Most departments
also offered a couple of courses in “Literary Composition,” one on critical methods, and another in the
history of English and/or an introduction to linguistics.148 In the boom years, departments worried less
about curricular coherence than covering classes, which was cited as a problem by more than half of
the departments in 1967. Finding teachers ceased to be a problem after the “panic” years of 1969 and
1970, which brought the “most dramatic, the most far-reaching, and the most significant change to
occur in the history of college English” (Wilcox 13)
Despite the historic drops in majors and jobs, the curriculum remained largely unshaken. This
resistance to change was built into the field coverage model. As discussed in Graff’s influential
Professing Literature, the popular and professional controversies of the time were accommodated by
simply adding a course in theory, film, ethnic literature, or feminism. By confining such trends to an
isolated course, departments were able to sustain programs of study that had grown increasingly
incoherent since New Critical methods were overlaid on historical surveys that rarely provided any
theoretical rationale for studying literature historically. These unexamined contradictions deepened as
critical methods became more contested with the turn to theory (Graff Professing 226-46). This
“contradictory mixture of historicism and formalism” served as a “residual paradigm” from the 1930s
premature, if not quite irrelevant.” By focusing on outside factors rather than on the discipline’s own attitudes to
“schoolmasters,” Grommon could conclude that without change elsewhere, “there will be little improvement” in
the attention to teaching, “no matter how much pedagogical training is forced into a Ph.D. program” (560).
147
Wilcox’s National Survey of Undergraduate Programs in English was funded by the Office of
Education. A thirty-nine page questionnaire was sent to three hundred departments in 1967 (with a 95% response
rate because a check for $25 was enclosed). Site visits were made to sixty-three departments. The growth of
higher education in the 1960s that so starkly contrasts with the dramatic decreases in English majors in the 1970s
is evident in the increase of four-year institutions from 1320 to 1526 between the start of his study and its
publication as The Anatomy of College English in 1973.
148
Wilcox found the failure to organize curricula more coherently to be quite notable given how
common the types of courses were: courses in individual authors were offered in 95.6% of departments (with
one course commonly required, usually Shakespeare), American literature was offered in 94.1% (with one
semester commonly required), genre courses in 93.4% (with one required course), period courses in 91.6%, and
surveys of English literature in 78.4% (with two terms typically required). Also one course was commonly
offered but not required in linguistics (offered in 79.5% of departments), advanced composition (in 72.2%),
creative writing (in 71.1%), and literary criticism (in 67%) (120, see also 140).
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through at least the 1970s (Waller 32). While there were repeated calls for more attention to linguistics
and composition, most undergraduate majors only included an isolated course or two, and graduate
programs often gave even less attention to writing, teaching, and language studies. Such limited
reforms are remarkable given the intensifying institutional pressures that faculty were facing to
acknowledge that their jobs depended on teaching and teachers. The increases and decreases in majors
in the 1960s and 70s followed directly upon changes in certification requirements and enrollments in
education (see ADE Committee on the Major 2002). Wilcox found that English majors were often
smaller than English education majors, which were offered in eighty-five percent of public
institutions. However, many departments seemed to “discharge this responsibility blindly” (110). Most
did not establish the partnerships with schools needed to supervise student teachers, with the excuse
commonly being that faculty did not want to work with schools and teachers, which is not surprising
given the lack of professional and institutional support for such work.
Wilcox’s survey helps to explain why departments were not forced to diversify their offerings
by the historic drop in majors in the 1970s, for he found that even beyond first-year classes, 55.8% of
students who enrolled in English courses were not majors (116). Wilcox found that 81.7% of
institutions “require or encourage” a year of English beyond the first-year, and a third year was
commonly taken in 43.1% of institutions (presumably liberal arts colleges) (116). Fewer than a quarter
of departments distinguished courses for majors and nonmajors. These statistics demonstrate that
undergraduate courses were largely serving a general education function even when the percentage of
graduates in English was at its highest point in history (8%), making English one of the three largest
majors in over three quarters of institutions (Wilcox 129). Even in the heyday of the profession,
English departments were largely about general education, not just in composition courses but in their
general undergraduate offerings.
This institutional reality helps to explain why departments tried to consign their service
function to composition courses in order to prevent the profession from becoming defined by that
function. The discounting of service work upheld the higher purposes of the profession in the “golden
age” of the research university. However, English departments might have established a more solid
footing for themselves if they had taken a fuller accounting of the values of their services when there
was funding available to support their work with general education, including teacher training and
articulation. Instead, professional leaders often looked down upon the populations that the profession
depended upon. Concerns were expressed at the time that over two-thirds of majors in coeducational
institutions were women because “docile young ladies” were seen to be “dutiful but somewhat dull
pupils” who made English look like an “effeminate discipline, fit only for women who intend to
teach” (Wilcox 129-130). Such attitudes are an important counterpoint to claims by the leadership of
the profession that English majors dropped not as a result of “developments internal to the field” but
because career opportunities for women expanded (ADE Committee on the Major 2002 73). One can
only wonder what might have developed if the discipline had diversified offerings to expand career
options, or even become more involved with the career options it provided in teaching. In any case, the
declining fortunes of the profession were due not just to the drops in majors but also to the general
degradation of teaching as a profession—a decline that the profession had itself helped justify by
temping out its work with general education, including teaching and articulation with schools.
By devaluing its broader obligations to general education, the profession failed to develop the
broader educational engagements that might have enabled it to anticipate and respond to the changes
in literacy that contributed to the collapse of jobs and majors in the 1970s. Canonical readings and
modes of reading were losing their representative authority with the diversification of the literate and
the rise of interactive modes of literacy that did not respect the autonomy of individual authors and
texts. Commentators such as Armstrong recognized that traditional curricular structures had become
unsustainable: “once there is no longer agreement about what it means to read, then ‘reading’ itself
must be studied as an issue in its own right.” The turn to theory made modes of reading into a subject
of study, but Derrida, de Man, and other leading theorists wrote in a notoriously inaccessible style for
a diminishing “coterie” of experts who were markedly indifferent to the experiences of the less literate
(Cain xiv). Readers’ responses were examined in a polemical style that was calculated to interest
broader audiences by neo-pragmatists such as Fish. Like other reader-response critics, Fish’s Is There
a Text in this Class? focused on the pragmatics of reading in the assumption that “the experience of
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the reader, rather than the ‘text itself,’ was the proper object of analysis” (21). Unlike earlier
pragmatists such as Rosenblatt, Fish did not concentrate on the personal dynamics of readers’
responses because he worked from the postmodern assumption that “selves are constituted by the ways
of thinking and seeing that inhere in social organizations” (336). From this perspective, literature
becomes a “self-consuming artifact” that was defined by a distinctive “way of reading” that enacts “a
community agreement about what will count as literature, which leads the members of the community
to pay a certain kind of attention and thereby to create literature” (Is There a Text? 40, 97). This
pragmatic conception of “interpretive communities” is what was lacking in the research of Richards
and Rosenblatt, and it quickly became a locus for social constructivist accounts of literacy, including
Bizzell’s noted “Cognition, Convention, and Certainty” in 1982 (103).
Transactional accounts of literacy and the literate were responding to the same changes that
conservatives were attempting to contain. The cultural and cognitive dimensions of literacy had been
begun to be studied in the 1960s as people began to have second thoughts about the traditional
assumption that literacy was a universal good because it was instrumental to modernization (see
Faigley). By the 1980s the assumption that literacy distinguished “savage” and “civilized” mentalities
largely went “out of fashion,” in the academy if not in the popular press (Kaestle 16). Beginning with
such works as Febvre and Martin’s L’Apparition du livre in 1958, the “culture of the book” had
increasingly become seen not as a transhistorical given but as a distinct social construction that raised
questions about textuality, technology, and the politics of literacy itself (see, for example, Davidson;
also Bazin). What came to be known as the “new literacy studies” emerged from the historical juncture
where literacy was pluralized. With the proliferation of literacies, literary studies turned theoretical,
and literate anxieties turned political. The Center for the Book was established in 1979 by the Library
of Congress, which proclaimed 1987 the “Year of Reader.” That same year Hirsch published his
Cultural Literacy and Bloom condemned public illiteracy in The Closing of the American Mind. The
literacy campaigns of the time were clearly an attempt to preserve the classics of the culture of the
book against transactional modes of literacy that challenged traditional literary conventions, including
the basic assumption that “the first requirement of a work of art . . . is that it should do nothing”
(Tompkins 210). As discussed in Tompkins’s “The Reader in History,” such assumptions had become
unstable with the theoretical shift to examine the effects of texts on readers. However, according to
Tompkins, literary studies failed to shift its focus of study and remained locked into formalist
explications that take “meaning to be the object of critical investigation” because, unlike rhetoricians,
literary critics continued to “equate language not with action but signification” (203).
While reader-response criticism and the expanding research on literacy had the potential to
redefine the working assumptions of the discipline, the collapse in consensus on the methods of New
Criticism seems to have combined with the downturn in jobs to create a “spiritless stalemate” in
departmental deliberations upon curricula (Kinnaird 758). Commentators recognized that the
profession was being subjected to forces that were beyond its control, though some also realized that it
had weakened its position by failing to attend to the needs of teachers and community colleges (see
Standley). As President of ADE in 1977, Alan Hollingsworth gave an address starkly entitled “Beyond
Survival” that was addressed to chairs “who wish to save their departments from the extreme erosion
or outright collapse that many English departments have undergone” (7). According to Hollingsworth,
it is not that lots of writing sections should not be offered as inexpensively as possible. My
point is that unless a composition program is embedded in a sufficiently rich matrix of
literature, literary criticism, and language study, it may be cut off from the engendering
insights of hundreds of years of literature, literary study, and language theory. (7)
Hollingsworth saw no contradiction between his assumptions that writing should be taught on the
cheap and that it was enriched by being allowed to keep company with literary studies—and he was
one of the more enlightened commentators on English departments. He maintained that a “researchbased, theory-based, experience-based” approach to teaching writing was vital to connect research and
teaching, bridge the divide of literature and composition, and get faculty involved in mentoring TAs.
On this and other points, Hollingsworth responded to the crisis by concluding that “departments
149
149
Fish’s “affective stylistics” had reworked New Critical modes of reading through linguistic models,
much as Ohmann had in such works as “Generative Grammars and the Concept of Literary Style,” which was
reprinted in the New Rhetorics collection cited in the last section (see Fish’s Is There a Text? 73-5).
124
interested in literature must help to create and sustain a truly literate reading public,” in part by
articulating a “true and democratized literacy” in collaboration with schools.150
The conflicted assumptions underlying such proposals document why the virtual collapse of
the field did not change its structure because the trends that pressed for change also raised resistance to
it. In 1971 as Secretary of English for MLA, Michael Shugrue gave a talk entitled “The English
Profession in the 1970s” that surveyed how disciplinary hierarchies were being undercut by the mass
media, public accountability pressures, and feminists’ critiques of canonical assumptions. Shugrue
proposed shifting the discipline’s focus from literary to literacy studies in order to develop
partnerships with schools, attract broader classes of students, and prepare graduates for varied careers.
Other reform proposals such as those of John Gerber in 1977 also recognized that drops in majors and
positions were due to broad changes in literacy and education that called upon professors to attend to
the conditions and consequences of their work. Such pragmatic responses often treated the discipline’s
service mission as the key to revamping programs of study around the practical benefits it offered.
Such proposals tried to harness the power of the uses of literacy to build public support, expand
programs, and open up new career opportunities. To reformers, this response was simply common
sense, but to traditionalists it threatened to overturn the profession by subordinating its higher
purposes to the utilitarian pressures against which it had defined itself.151 Such anxieties were not ill
founded. The instrumental powers of literacy have such popular appeal that they challenge the
profession’s sense of itself in ways that have been contained by confining writing and teacher training
to service courses.152 In retrospect, we can see how such hierarchies have limited the discipline’s
learning capacities at critical phases in its development, for a discipline cannot expect to learn from the
work it ignores. As changes in literacy deepened, the discipline could no longer maintain its critical
distance, and practically engaged alternatives began to emerge in broadly based departments.
The Strategic Possibilities of Rhetoric in the Curricular Revisions of the 1980s
The crisis in the standing of the profession continued into the 1980s. Undergraduate and
doctoral degrees in English were both cut in half by 1983, when tenure-track jobs began a five-year
drop of 40%. When discussions in MLA forums considered how to respond to the collapse of the
academic job market, they tended to focus on ways to find places for traditionally trained doctorates
and rarely advanced practical proposals for revamping training, even though traditional curricula
provided no preparation directly relevant to nonacademic jobs (see Woodruff, “The PhD”). One trend
that proved undeniable was hiring in rhetoric and composition. Only 5% of new positions were in
composition and technical writing in the fall 1971 postings in the MLA’s Job List, but by 1979 those
A sampling of responses to the “present professional crisis” from 1975 is provided by the
departmental profiles in Cowan’s Options for the Teaching of English (63). Departments’ vitality varied
according to such factors as their state’s accreditation requirements and their willingness to expand writing
offerings, with creative writing cited by several departments as being in high demand. The departments at Yale
and Chicago took pride in sustaining traditional programs of study, while departments such as those at Virginia
Polytechnic and Ball State saw strong increases in majors that were raising the prestige of their departments
along with that of their institutions.
151
A repositioning of the discipline as a “service profession” was set out at “The ADE-MLA
Wingspread Conference on Major Issues Facing the College Teaching of Language and Literature in the 1970s”
(1973). Gerber, Shugrue, and others at the conference developed detailed proposals for reforms based on the
assumption that the demise of traditional majors might be “inevitable.” Such off-putting assumptions may
explain why nothing seems to have followed from the proposals. One purpose of the proposed reforms was to
increase minority enrollments, which have historically been markedly lower in the humanities than in education.
152
The popular appeal of various areas of English studies is documented by a survey done by Life
magazine that is cited by Hogan. Twenty-five-hundred parents, students, teachers, and administrators were
surveyed about what studies they found most useful, important, and interesting. Literature was distinguished
from composition and grammar. For importance and usefulness, literature was ranked as low as hygiene,
physical education, and music. On the other hand, composition and grammar were ranked among the most
useful, the most important, the most difficult— and the most boring. Hogan concluded that such responses left
English professors with three choices: accept the popular demise of literary studies, split up the discipline and
choose sides, or weather out the storms of the time. The profession seems to have largely elected the third option
in the 1970s, though the second emerged as a real possibility in the comp-lit wars of the 1980s.
150
125
areas accounted for 23% of all positions. This trend contributed to the spread of graduate programs in
rhetoric and composition, as documented by the national surveys of curricula that I will review in this
section. Following on the hiring of writing specialists, undergraduate curricula began to include more
writing, language, and rhetoric courses. These reforms were significantly more common in public
institutions, especially broadly based departments that attended to the needs of English education
students. The diversification of curricula further increased the demand for rhetoric and composition
specialists, but the shift in hiring did not really change the professional economy of the discipline. The
temping out of general education had laid the groundwork for the historic increases in non-tenure track
faculty and union activity that date from the 1970s. As with other leading trends, unionization was
more common in public institutions because faculty in less elite institutions were quicker to see
collective action as a means to deal with the collapsing conditions of the time (see DeCew 11-15).
Critics recognized that the crisis had been produced by graduate programs that supplied too many
cheaply paid TAs and too many traditionally trained graduates, who ended up in teaching jobs for
which they were not well trained or paid (Cutts). Some recognized that ignoring teaching actually
reinforced the standing of elite graduate programs that imposed “narrow and rigid canons of
professionalism” because ignoring such duties meant that the graduate curriculum could not be held
accountable to them (Woodruff, “Only Connect”).153
The disconnect between leading graduate programs and the prevailing job system explains
why repeated surveys of graduates documenting the need for more attention to teaching and writing
resulted not in broad curricular reforms but in the establishment of more vocationally oriented
programs of study in rhetoric and composition, which were much more likely to be introduced into
public institutions than in the graduate programs that the profession look to for leadership.154 The first
graduate programs in rhetoric and composition were founded in the 1970s in land-grant universities
such as Ohio State University and in other institutions such as Texas Women’s University that were
peripheral to the profession’s sense of itself. Most of the sixteen programs established in the 1970s
were in public universities with large general education writing programs. In an ADE survey of 356
departments undertaken in 1983-4 by Bettina Huber and Art Young, 52% of departments with PhD
programs offered graduate degrees in creative writing, 45% offered them in rhetoric and composition,
and 12% in technical communication. 60% of departments that offered creative writing also had
programs in rhetoric and composition. More than half of public institutions offered graduate studies in
creative writing (56.4%) and in rhetoric and composition (50.3%). These rates were over three times
that of private institutions (15.7% for both areas). This difference can be attributed to the fact that
writing courses made up 71.8% of undergraduate classes in public institutions, as compared to 53.8%
in private, according to a survey in 1991-2 by Huber that was published in 1996. Departments that
diversified graduate and undergraduate offerings saw increased enrollments. Programs in technical
communication saw the greatest proportional growth. Huber and Young conclude that majors in such
areas increased enrollments by attracting “new constituencies for English studies.” The growth in such
areas is also significant because technological innovations were almost entirely confined to writing
courses, which accounted for 96.6% of courses using computers in 1991 (Huber, “Undergraduate”).
Such technological changes helped advance ongoing revisions of undergraduate curricula.
Those revisions are documented by surveys conducted by ADE in the 1980s that provide telling
details on how reforms were shaped by the differences among PhD, MA, BA, and AA departments. In
the national sample drawn up with a grant from NEH to assess evolving trends, forty-three percent of
the departments included other disciplines such as philosophy or foreign languages (Huber and
Young). In departments offering majors, 85% offered traditional English majors, 51% offered English
education, 33% offered creative writing, and 28% offered technical communication majors.
Journalism majors were included in 34.9% of departments in BA/MA departments, with 21.7% of
153
One of the main proposals for dealing with the job crisis was to discourage rising departments from
adding graduate programs. Ironically, emerging programs actually had better placement rates than elite
departments according to the MLA Job Market Committee in 1979, which attributed that trend to established
programs’ being less responsive to changing needs (Hellstom 97).
154
Surveys of PhD graduates often found that they wished they had been able to study teaching, writing,
and language. For example, Allen surveyed 1,880 PhDs who graduated between 1955 and 1965: 58.9% wished
that they had a course in grammar, though only 3.6% had taken one (172; see Kline, Huff, and Kinneavy).
126
those same departments also offering speech, and 65.1% offering linguistics (much higher than in PhD
departments, where only 12.6% offered journalism, 8.1% offered speech, and 52.3% offered
linguistics). Such institutional differences are vital to consider because researchers tend to conceive of
English as a departmentalized discipline. While that model may fit the realities of research
universities, it can distract faculty in interdisciplinary departments from thinking about how to harness
institutional resources to develop curricula suited to the distinctive needs of their students. Many
departments have had the potential to develop majors combining various types of writing and media
because 80.2% of the departments surveyed in 1984 offered creative writing courses, 61.4% offered
technical writing, 52.7% business writing, 43.3% speech, 43.2% linguistics, 38.5% journalism, and
35% film. From her research on different types of departments, Huber concluded that a critical nexus
for curricular innovation was centered at the conjunction of writing, language studies, and English
education offerings because departments that were more involved in training teachers generally
offered and required significantly more language, rhetoric, and writing courses.
Such institutional differences shaped the reforms of undergraduate curricula that followed
upon the diversification of graduate programs and faculty hiring. Using roughly the same sample of
over three hundred and fifty departments that was used by previous ADE studies, in 1984 Huber and
Laurence found that general education requirements in literature had dropped significantly since
Wilcox’s study. 36% of institutions were found to have no requirements, and most others required
such courses only for some majors. From these findings, the authors concluded that “more
fundamental than the highly publicized debate about canonical and noncanonical literature may be the
question of the place [of] literature of any sort—ancient or modern, classic or contemporary, elite or
popular, canonized or otherwise.” Following the turn to theory discussed in the last section, more
attention was reportedly being given to theory in undergraduate courses in 87.2% of departments.
Between 1980 and 1985, 36.8% of departments had added professional and technical writing courses,
the greatest area of increase. 28.7% of departments added courses in women writers, 28.4% added
upper-division rhetoric and composition, 23.6% added film, 21.3% ethnic literature, and 19.6%
creative writing, with creative writing majors in 55.5% of departments in 1984-5. However, only
18.1% of PhD institutions had technical writing majors, as compared to 35.1% of MA and 38.3% of
BA institutions. These distinctions are significant because they indicate the differing resources for
reforming literacy studies that have been available in a BA or PhD department. For example a
department that offered majors other than English was far more likely to require writing and
linguistics courses than even very large departments that presumably had more resources to expand
programs of study. As a result of such institutional differences, 15.5% of joint programs required
advanced courses in rhetoric, as did 13.7% of departments in mid-sized public institutions, but only
2.9% of departments in the largest institutions (Huber, “Undergraduate”).
As documented by such surveys, specialized English departments have presented different
possibilities for innovation than those that still include journalists and rhetoricians concerned with
public address. Unfortunately new faculty have been discouraged from realizing the potentials of
working in a more broadly based department by nature of their having been trained in research
departments where collaborations on teaching are not rewarded. Prevailing reward systems teach
graduate students that general education has marginal professional standing. Departments with
research missions have generally sustained them by assigning first-year courses to non-tenure track
faculty (who in 1999 were teaching 94.1% of first-year courses in doctoral departments and 57.8% of
those in baccalaureate departments,).155 While only 31% of the undergraduate courses in doctoral
departments are taught by tenure-track faculty, their graduate students will likely go on to more
broadly engaged departments, including baccalaureate departments where 59% of all undergraduate
courses were taught by tenure-track faculty in 2000 (ADE Committee on the Major 78). While many
faculty will spend most of their time teaching general education, they are often prepared to assume that
duty in departments where few of their professors are involved in general education. As a result of this
discontinuity, when faculty make the transition from a graduate program to a more comprehensive
155
Wilcox found that all English faculty had to teach first-year English in 33% of public and 57.4% of
private institutions. Wilcox also found that most large public institutions used teaching assistants (with the ratio
of faculty to graduate assistants being 1 to 10 at UCLA and 1 to 30 at the University of Illinois) (65-66). Such
departments provided models for the job system that became the norm in research universities.
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department, they are likely to see the greater involvement of tenure-track faculty in general education
as an obligation that would be better assigned to adjuncts to avoid distracting professors from their real
work. Such trends spread across the country in the 1970s and 80s as the declining job market brought
faculty with more research credentials to more teaching oriented institutions.
These trends undercut the institutional impact of the turn to theory that “destabilized”
traditional methods and objects of study (Lunsford, Moglen, and Slevin vi). Literary critics ranging
from Wayne Booth through J. Hillis Miller to Terry Eagleton looked to rhetoric to provide an
integrative paradigm for work with reading and writing. Such proposals were undermined by the
professional anxieties that deepened as the numbers of compositionists rose and openings for critics
declined. In 1979, J.Hillis Miller observed that “in the area of expository writing a large industry is
being mobilized to create a new discipline.” With echoes of Matthew Arnold, Miller’s “The Function
of Rhetorical Study at the Present Time” concluded that rhetoric was “the key” to lock writing
instruction to literature and thereby prevent “pragmatic programs in expository writing” from rising up
and leaving literary studies with declining resources. For Miller, and for other theorists such as de Man
and Culler, rhetoric was largely about the figurist elements of discourse that had been identified with
deconstructionism.156 According to Miller, composition and literature were both passing through “a
‘paradigm shift’ from a referential or mimetic view of language to an active or performative one.” In
the same year as Miller’s article, Culler called upon graduate programs to “rethink” the basic relations
of rhetorics and poetics because the modern demarcation of literature had become unsustainable as a
result of assaults on the canon. Culler perceived that broader changes in literacy were leaving literature
in “a very problematic role in the cultures in which our students live.” According to Miller and Culler,
that problematic position called for reorganizing programs of study around the transactional relations
between literature and other modes of representation, including the mass media. Culler and Miller
concluded that surveys of masterworks were based on tropes that had exhausted their uses, on both a
theoretical and pragmatic level, but both Culler and Miller stopped short of extending their critiques to
questioning the institutional structures that had perpetuated those hierarchies.
Such hierarchies loomed over the hierarchical relations of rhetoric to composition, for the rise
of graduate programs and tenure-track jobs for researchers threatened to reproduce the prevailing
subordination of teaching to research within rhetoric and composition. Some graduate programs were
established from former English education programs, and the energy that went into developing
research programs often overshadowed less professionally rewarding work with school teachers. That
work shaped the early development of rhetoric and composition, most notably in writings such as
Emig’s Composing Processes of Twelfth Graders and Britton’s The Development of Writing Abilities
(11-18) (see Gallagher 179). While graduate programs in rhetoric and composition were clearly a
direct response to the need to prepare teachers of composition, that need was not actually seen to be
primary in most of those programs. In a survey in 1986, only 19% of graduate programs in rhetoric
and composition identified pedagogy as primary to curricula. Pedagogy was not seen to be any more
primary than history, which was also cited by 19% of respondents. Twice that percentage looked to
theory as central (Huber, “A Report” 152). Given such priorities, rhetoric and composition ran the risk
of reproducing the very hierarchies that leading figures such as Maxine Hairston were invoking to
persuade compositionists to leave English departments. On the other hand, the theoretical and
historical emphases of graduate programs show how reductive and professionally self-serving it has
been for commentators such as Guillory and Godzlich to reduce rhetoric and composition to a
technical and vocational mindset.
In the theoretical orientation of graduate programs, as in the technical emphases of basic
composition courses, one can see that the drive to abstract scholarship from practical applications
follows the general tendency of professionalism to divorce the higher purposes of disciplines from the
technical expertise of practitioners. While this tendency may encourage us to focus on the
dissemination of theory down to practitioners on the ground in the field, we need to devote far more of
our institutional and intellectual resources to investigating how disciplinary innovations are
constrained by institutional factors such as class size and teacher turnover. Such factors limit the
156
According to Guillory, de Man’s conception of “rhetorical reading” arose out of an “exhaustion in the
discourse of literature” that began with the structuralist shift from aesthetic to linguistic models that identified
literary qualities with the tropes of rhetoric (178, 208).
128
impact of the theoretical innovations that we often use to define developments in the field. For
example, the process movement in the 1970s and 80s had a broader impact on pedagogy than perhaps
any other trend. However, like previous trends such as the New Criticism, the process movement was
often reduced in practice to a mechanistic model that worked against its own theoretical premises. The
most detailed picture of the impact of the process movement on teaching is provided by the surveys
that Applebee reported in Contexts for Learning to Write in 1984. Applebee found that overworked
teachers and over-tested students tended to treat the writing process as a sequence of mechanical steps
such as filling out thesis statements because classroom routines provided little sense of the generative
potentials of writing for different audiences, situations, and purposes (188). As Crowley has discussed,
the applications of the process model often amounted to little more than mixing personal writing into
the formalism of current-traditional rhetoric (Composition in the University 197-214).
The institutional and ideological forces that have worked to reduce writing to a technical skill
set critics and compositionists at odds in ways that might have been more productively addressed if
rhetoric had achieved the integrative role that had been envisioned for it. A glance across the divide
between the arts and sciences may be helpful in assessing the forces that shaped the institutional
transmission of theoretical innovations. In speech communications, rhetoric was also invoked by
critics against more technical and applied concerns, but rhetoric did not have the same integrative
possibilities in communications because aspiring social scientists felt little need to turn to the classical
tradition to legitimize their rising concerns.157 On other points, rhetorical studies in communications
did parallel trends in English. The counterparts to Project English and the Dartmouth Conference were
the two NEH-funded conferences held by the National Developmental Project on Rhetoric in 1970.
Leading figures wrote position statements that provide counterpoints to the trends that shaped the turn
to theory in English studies. In Becker’s “Rhetorical Studies for the Contemporary World,” the
transition from structuralist to poststructuralist models is framed not by literary or linguistic theories
but by information science. Despite the differences in theoretical sources, this institutional transition
also followed upon a perceived “knowledge explosion” that made texts too richly interconnected to be
studied as autonomous objects. According to Becker, individual texts and authors lost their standing as
objects of study as scholars expanded their frames of reference to examine the symbolic economies
through which information became diffused through social relations (33).158
While Becker’s vision stood far afield from the rise of deconstruction, rhetoric was positioned
by the National Development Project in ways that offer a broader sense of rhetoric’s historical
potentials than the more self-serving aspects of Miller’s and Cullers’s perspectives on rhetoric. One of
the contributors to the New Criticism, Richard McKeon, delivered an influential plenary entitled “The
Uses of Rhetoric in a Technological Age: Architectonic Productive Arts” (see also McKeon’s
“Criticism and the Liberal Arts”). To mediate the institutional oppositions of interpretive and
productive arts, McKeon looked to rhetoric for heuristics to investigate the transactions of “knowing,
doing, and making” (50). McKeon reviewed Aristotelian modes of inquiry that move from experience
through art to science, with politics providing the civic purposes for practical wisdom in political
action. McKeon also reviewed Ciceronian attempts to mediate the dualism of “words and actions,” and
the Renaissance shift to the humanist distinction of “art and nature.” According to McKeon, in the age
of science the driving opposition becomes “values and facts.” This opposition emerges from the
“separation of theory and practice by the constitution of a technology which is theory applied, the
logos of techne” (54). Rather than assuming a critical distance from technological rationality, McKeon
concluded that “the architectonic productive art in an age of technology is obviously technology itself
given a rhetorical transformation.” On this and other points, McKeon set out generative topoi that
positioned rhetoric as a humanistic philosophy of practical engagement in technological change. If
157
According to Bryant (1971), the Behavioral Conference in Communications in 1968 was a sort of
coming of age for social scientists. Critical responses to those methods were reviewed in Brockriede’s “Trends in
Rhetoric: Toward a Blending Criticism and Science” at the first Developmental Project on Rhetoric in 1970.
158
Becker cites the example of the spread of the news of President Kennedy’s shooting on November
22, 1963. By the time of his death thirty minutes later, the news was known by two thirds of Americans, though
fewer than half actually got the message from the media. For examples of the diffusion of such messages, Becker
refers to “message sets” about the Viet Nam War that he represented as “mosaics” comprised of bits of
information, images, symbolic gestures, and social interactions.
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such a standpoint had been adopted, English departments might have been able to break down the
disabling dualism between the truly literary and the merely technical, and thereby become critically
engaged with the technologies that were transforming literacy (see Kinney and Miller).
Looking back through the categories that McKeon provided, we can see that the
diversification of graduate programs and the introduction of technical writing and computer
technologies was part of an historical transition in literacy studies in which the operative distinction
was ceasing to be that between the two cultures of the arts and sciences, as C.P. Snow had framed it in
1959. The opposition had shifted to that between literary and technical intellectuals. As noted in the
introduction, these groups have been identified as critical and technocratic intellectuals by Guillory
and other literary critics (see ***). Unfortunately, that self-serving opposition does not have much
potential for developing humanistic modes of practical engagement with the technological and social
changes that are transforming literacy, the literate, and literacy studies. Ever since the Yale Report
almost a century ago, literary critics have buttressed their positions by dismissing teaching and general
education as accommodations to the prevailing vocationalism without acknowledging how such a
position undercuts the institutional foundations and political potentials of the humanities.
A strategic assessment of how those potentials were shaped by converging social, disciplinary,
and institutional trends is provided by a retrospective account of the founding of one of the most noted
graduate program in rhetoric and composition, the PhD Program in Rhetoric established at Carnegie
Mellon University in 1980. “Planning Graduate Programs in Rhetoric” was published in 2000 by two
of the founders, Richard Young and Erwin Steinberg (who has already been cited as a Coordinator of
Project English and co-editor of English Today). Young and Steinberg advised those planning to
advance institutional reforms to look to the strategic potentials that arise at places where expanding
disciplinary trends converge with social needs and institutional resources. Young and Steinberg report
that they sought to relate research on the composing process (particularly the emphasis on invention)
with the need to teach students how to write, and with CMU’s strengths in research on cognition and
communications. Linda Flower and other researchers at CMU advanced cognitive research on the
writing process that was among the most influential work done in the 1980s, and the English
department at CMU also developed one of the most richly theorized undergraduate curricula in the
field (see Waller). Flower’s research shifted in the 1990s to focus on community literacy. That area of
study has gained the same sort of strategic importance that graduate programs in rhetoric and
composition had in the 1980s as a result of the rising importance of writing at work and the expanding
potentials of interactive technologies (see Faigley and Miller). Responding to trends that shaped the
rise of rhetoric and composition, our discipline is expanding its engagement with outreach and service
learning as universities are pressed to account for their public benefits, in part by forces that are
working to reduce those benefits to merely economic terms.
These developments can be identified with the innovations that I have explored in previous
sections through the wide-ranging contributions of Erwin Steinberg, particularly his “Applied
Humanities” in 1974. Like other reformers in the 1960s and 70s, Steinberg called for the discipline to
reengage with writing for the public in support of the interdisciplinary project of becoming more
broadly involved with popular media, ethnic cultures, and urban problems. Following through on the
projects he had undertaken with Project English, Steinberg called upon English professors to move
past the ends of the profession to collaborate with schools and become community ethnographers and
pop culture critics. Steinberg saw that the discipline had mawkishly imitated the research hierarchies
of the sciences and had thereby lost its institutional footing as professors had come to look down upon
general education, articulation, and teacher preparation. He recognized that while the sciences had
instrumental benefits to justify their research, humanists did not, making teaching vital to the viability
of the discipline in a way that it was not in the sciences. As Steinberg recognized, while research
hierarchies have served science well, they have come to exclude the humanities in ways that call for a
broad reassessment of the disabling tendency of professions to divorce their higher mission from their
practical applications. The sort of articulation projects that Steinberg had developed, and which his
successors at Carnegie Mellon have advanced, set out a vision of the humanities as integrally involved
with civic issues. This vision offers perhaps the best hope for the humanities to revitalize its historical
role in negotiating traditional values against changing needs to address shared goals.
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Conclusion: A “humanistic conception” of “an active participation in practical life”
Throughout the last half of the last century, English departments struggled to come to terms
with the “communications revolution” created by film, television, and computer technologies. As with
earlier transformations of literacy, that revolution first restructured the field of literacy studies at its
base, in exploding general education programs. A communications movement emerged that
challenged English departments’ control of instruction in literacy. Like earlier transitions in the history
of literacy and literacy studies, the expansion of access to higher education and the spread of the mass
media gave rise to a sense of crisis. A back to basics literacy campaign attempted to reestablish a
respect for order at an elemental level, with conservatives attacking progressive representations of the
literate tradition. The convergence of these political, educational, and technological forces shaped the
rise and near collapse of the profession. Majors and tenure-track positions were cut in half, while
deprofessionalized teaching jobs nearly doubled. Professional leaders in elite institutions faced less
pressure to rethink hierarchies because these trends strengthened the stratification of higher education,
while expanding its base to accommodate increases in lower-class students.159 More broadly based
departments responded by expanding programs of study. As detailed in this chapter, departments in
public institutions were more likely to diversify graduate programs, and public institutions that
attended to English education were more likely to require language, rhetoric, and writing courses.
These innovations have been pivotal to the development of the discipline because writing courses have
been centers of work with new technologies. That work is vital to the sort of humanistic engagement
with ongoing changes that I identified with Gramsci at the opening of this chapter.
At this and other critical junctures in its development, the profession weakened its ability to
articulate the values of its work by discounting teaching, teacher training, and writing for popular
audiences and at work. The articulation apparatus of the discipline was not vital when literature could
be upheld as an autonomous area of research. For most practical purposes, the traditional humanistic
conception of literature as an end in itself came to an end in the “culture wars” of the 80s. A more
pragmatic stance began to emerge in the movements that I have surveyed in this chapter. The attempts
of more conservative elements in the profession to contain this pragmatic turn is pointedly
documented in the ADE Committee Report on the English Major in 2002. That committee was set up
after another downturn of graduates from English between 1993 and 1997. Instead of repeating earlier
surveys to document continuing reforms, the committee devoted its efforts to justifying its assessment
that the “flight of students from English” was not due to anything the discipline had done, or not done.
That trend was instead a “healthy correction” because “selectivity” was seen to be more important than
“popularity” given the disorienting “demand for Vocationalism” (84, 77). In his editorial to the ADE
Bulletin issue on the committee’s report, David Laurence stated as an article of faith that “a specific
and valuable sort of uselessness characterizes true engagement in the learning that serious
consideration of literature uniquely affords” (4). To preserve this “uselessness,” the committee
recommended that departments limit pragmatic reforms to “minor” accommodations to technological
changes and the popularity of writing courses, or otherwise risk compromising “curricular integrity.”
More creative efforts to explore the converging potentials of the four corners of the field were
put forward by the contributors to the ADE Bulletin issue. After an introductory article by Culler on
how majors could be structured around methods of rhetorical, cultural, and literary analysis, revisions
of undergraduate curricula are described by faculty from such institutions as Louisiana State,
Montclair State, Bronx Community College, and the University of Houston. In such accounts, one can
see how reforms tend to emerge at several strategic curricular points where expanding disciplinary
trends converge with social and institutional needs: gateway courses where faculty have to articulate
159
The research of Astin and Oseguera shows that poorer students are less likely to enroll in selective
institutions than they were in the 1970s, with last decade bringing an almost fifty percent decrease in the access
of students with the lowest social economic status. Astin and Oseguera attribute the increased stratification of
higher education to policy decisions made between the mid 1980s and 1990s. As a result of these trends, in 1998
a White American was almost twice as likely to earn a college degree as an African American, and three times as
likely as a Hispanic (see Andersen 23). One of the most striking aspects of such statistics is how marginally
relevant they seem to be to the concerns of college English. While no discipline is more central to access to
higher education, that fact rarely features into programs of study, including research programs as well as
undergraduate and graduate programs.
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their methods to those who do not share their assumptions, internships that provide contacts with
public constituencies, English education majors that call for collaborations with schools, capstone
courses where students reflect upon what they can do with what they have learned, and outcomes
assessments initiatives that challenge departments to document what students have learned to do.
Several contributors discuss how their departments had developed more broadly collaborative,
research-based reforms in an effort to break out of the field-coverage model that had been caught up in
“replicating” the specialized expertise of faculty (Moffat 13). Rather than dismissing vocationalism,
contributors maintained that students’ needs and goals present challenges that professors “ought to
welcome” (Shepard 26). To explore those challenges, Beidler reported on surveys of his department’s
graduates on what they found most beneficial in their studies: 69.7% cited learning to write, while
22% cited literary appreciation, and most valued how these skills had helped them get a job (31).
According to contributors to the special issue on the English major, their departments’ efforts
to develop “literacy studies” majors organized around “reading, interpreting, and writing about texts”
had been influenced by “the culture wars, critical theory, poststructuralism, and the reemergence of
Marxist social criticism” (Schwartz 16). A retrospective on those movements is provided by the final
article in the issue, J. Hillis Miller’s “My Fifty Years in the Profession.” According to Miller, the
theoretical turn in the 1970s had been “a sign” that the “social function of literature” had changed with
the spread of mass media. Miller perceived that media, ethnic, and women’s studies were part of an
effort to rediscover “the social utility” that was lost as “the study of canonical works” became a
“minor form” in the “electronic age” (65). Miller’s eulogy for what he elsewhere characterized as the
“culture of the book” openly confronts the historical forces that the ADE Committee on the Major’s
report attempted to contain in limited accommodations. In an earlier issue of ADE Bulletin, Miller
discussed how a “crisis in representation” had made it impossible to continue to read classical texts as
synecdoches for an author and his era. As a result of the political, cultural, and technological forces
that converged in that crisis, traditional literature majors became increasingly incoherent, and the
humanities lost their authority to represent the public in universalist terms (Miller, “Literary Study”
32, 31). Miller calls for a retreat into an ill-defined “new university of dissensus” as the only defense
against programs that teach “communication skills” to “technocrats in the service of transnational
corporations” (33). On this and other points, Miller conveniently ignores how such programs had
throughout his half-century career served to provide resources for literary studies (33).
In the last decades of his career, Miller observed that literary studies had undergone a
“massive shift to cultural studies” (“Literary” 32). Cultural studies has come to provide broadly
engaging conceptions of literacy that have moved beyond the bookishness of literary studies. This
impetus can be traced back to such foundational works as Hoggart’s Uses of Literacy, Thompson’s
Making of the English Class, and Williams’ Long Revolution, which are concerned with the social
sources and political implications of literacy in everyday life. In America as in Britain, the shift to a
transactional conception of literary studies was a response not simply to interactive technologies but to
shifting cultural economies. The classroom came to be seen as a “contact zone” that was connected to
other sites where culture is transacted. As Pratt discussed in her influential article on the topic, in the
1980s “imagined national syntheses that had retained hegemonic force began to dissolve.” Groups
“with histories and lifeways different from the official ones began insisting on those histories and
lifeways as part of their citizenship, as the very mode of their membership in the national collectivity”
(39). The folkways of oppressed peoples came to be seen as dramatic enactments of the “radical
contingency” of human understanding—epitomized not by the critic realizing the wholeness of
experience through the self-controlled reading of a book, but by the everyday experience of peoples
for whom such verities hold little practical import. As discussed in Kent’s “Self-Conscious Writers
and Black Traditions” in 1972, African Americans had an “uncertain and ambiguous relationship to all
cultural institutions,” including “the high ground of humanism.” That field of study has often been
seem by working people as far removed from the “gritty” realities of working-class students (76-8).
For such students, the professed “uselessness” of literature seems calculated to offer nothing more
than what they have been taught to expect from education (Laurence 4).
According to J. Hillis Miller, the “massive shift to cultural studies” occurred as result of the
television generation’s having joined the professoriate. Cultural studies has been disbursed through the
same informal educational exchanges as the semiotic models that were first established as methods of
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study in the communications movement. As in the extracurricular networks of the previous century,
these informal teacher networks have also broadcast the ethnographic methods that have become part
of ethnic, media, and women’s studies along with complementary modes of inquiry such as service
learning, community literacies, and social movement studies. Like the progressive movement, these
modes of collaborative inquiry are defined not by individual close readings but by the transactional
pragmatics of collective experience. For progressives, the historical models for that experience have
been the traditions of women, workers, and people of color. These methods have often been guided by
the desire to enter into broader coalitions with those groups in order to make public universities into
more than an oxymoron. Stuart Hall has stated that his basic goal for the Centre at Birmingham was to
educate “organic intellectuals.” Gramsci was very attuned to the tensions that arise when one
understands intellection as imbedded in the lived experience of a community, and then tries to
combine this “humanistic” understanding with an attention to the fact that “school is the instrument
through which intellectuals of various levels are elaborated” (Gramsci 10). Hall acknowledged how
problematic such ethnographic ambitions are, but he held them out as a hopeful vision of how the
work of education could help people to develop collective agency.
Through cultural studies and other wide-ranging collaborative projects such as community
literacy, we are coming to understand that articulation, general education, and the profession of
teaching are integral parts of literacy and literary studies. Decades ago, Richard Lanham recognized
that the “real question for literary study now is not whether our students will be reading Great
Traditional Books or Relevant Modern ones in the future, but whether they will be reading books at
all” (1989, 265). Lanham called upon the profession to move beyond its “craft-guild” investment in
print to “think constructively about the electronic word” in order to develop “more agile, capacious,
and hopeful” engagements with technological changes in literacy (288). Our ability to develop that
more expansive field of vision has been undercut by efforts to divorce the higher purposes of the
profession from the basic work that we do in general education. Those efforts have become
unsustainable as teaching has become increasingly deprofessionalized. Our discipline has been
complicit with that historical trend, and if we can recognize that complicity, we may be able to
confront the forces at work at the ends of the profession. We need to work from the acknowledgement
that there are more than a million English teachers who are struggling with the reduction of our studies
to basic skills courses. Decades ago, at another critical juncture in the history of work, Project English
set out the goal of developing “a critical, professional public” by establishing school-college
partnerships of a “hitherto undreamed of scale” (Marckwardt 11). That dream is still imaginable,
though its pragmatics will take a lot of work to realize.
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CONCLUSION
WHY THE PRAGMATICS OF LITERACY ARE CRITICAL
The literary historian of the future will have to widen his vision and take into . . . account such
factors as the invention of the rotary press, the state of general education and enlightenment,
the constant cheapening of the processes of printing, the increasing ease of travel and
communication, the distribution of surplus wealth and leisure, the introduction of the
typewriter, the distributions of bookstores and circulating libraries, the popularization of the
telephone, motor car, movies, and radio, and legislative attitudes toward such questions as
censorship, international copyright, and a tariff on foreign books. (Harry Clark, 1928 23)
Clark envisioned a future in which the history of literature would be studied against changes
in literacy, education, and mass media. Clark’s sense of history was shaped by the intense social and
technological changes of his time. Technologies figure prominently in his set of historical
benchmarks, and for good reason. In the decade in which he published “American Literary History and
American Literature,” radio networks were formed, the first talking film was made, the television tube
was invented and signals began to be transmitted. Clark recognized that these electronic media would
transform literary studies, but he perhaps underestimated how single-mindedly academics would work
to establish studies of language, literacy, and literature as autonomous fields of expertise. Those
enclaves of expertise have been broken down by the expansion of market forces into all sectors of
public life, and the mass media have become part of our daily lives with the spread of “personal”
computers. Literature, language, and literacy have lost their autonomy, and more transactional and
networked conceptions of cultural and literacy studies have gained currency. In the writings of Brian
Street and others, “New Literacy Studies” has opposed itself to the “autonomous” models of literacy
such as those that underlay the modes of close reading that New Critics used to demarcate literary
texts from their social contexts. Networked modes of reading have emerged with the diversification of
literacies and the rise of cultural studies. Those trends bring us back to thinking about literature in
ways that Clark envisioned. We have come to examine how literatures have evolved in tandem with
broader historical transitions that have redefined literacy and the literate as access to education
expanded, the public became more diversified, and the standing of the literate became more contested.
At pivotal junctures in the history of literacy, new conceptions of literature have emerged: in
the colonial period, religious literature was upheld as the highest object of study in a scribal
curriculum in which students were taught to recite traditional assumptions and then deduce their
individual obligations from them. In revolutionary America, English studies adopted a more oratorical
sense of literature as the educated were pressed to persuade colonials that they were Americans. In the
antebellum period, the penny press and common school established the modern identification of
literacy with schooling. Literacy expanded to more diverse classes of readers, and literature adopted a
more belletristic tenor as it became caught up in efforts to teach readers to distinguish between polite
and popular tastes. The antebellum period was a transitional phase in the development of literacy as
well as literature. The effort to codify a national language and literature was informed by a “civic
professionalism” that shaped the transition from republicanism into the sort of professionalism that
would became the unifying ideology of the “managerial-professional classes” with the rise of the
research university. In tandem with these historical transitions in literature and the literate, the mode of
literacy instruction shifted from syllogistic disputations to forensic debates to belletristic essays. Each
genre served a representative function in the classroom and in the forums that the literate moved into
upon graduation. A deductive epistemology bridged classroom recitations with the sermons that
graduates preached to the converted. Forensics helped prepare graduates for the political debates of the
time, while belletristic essays helped the literate to see their efforts at self-improvement as a means to
social progress.
The historical developments that led up to a modern conception of literature provide a broader
frame of reference for assessing the rise of the profession. In the progressive era, college English
studies began to be divided up into areas of expertise as critics and linguists consolidated their
professional standing by positioning their concerns above work with teaching and writing. That
hierarchy has broken down as the model of autonomous disciplines has lost its representative authority
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to the logic of market relations. As Ohmann discussed in “Teaching and Studying Literature at the End
of Ideology,” “the origins of our present malaise” lie “in the core of our earlier beliefs” (95). The
divorce of intellectual inquiry from pragmatic considerations had long been a mainstay of the liberal
arts, and that other worldliness served to distinguish academics from those who labor for a living.
Such liberal arts hierarchies contributed to the depoliticized outlook of the middle classes by
distancing the culture of professionalism from popular politics. This critical distance has ironically
been valorized by one of the profession’s leading pragmatists, Stanley Fish, though it has also been
critiqued by Said and others. As autonomous disciplines, literature and linguistics had clearly drawn
boundaries, but those borders have become harder to defend as enclaves of expertise have been broken
up by market forces. According to Richard Lanham, historic social, technological, and institutional
changes are pressing the profession to address the “problems in the social and educational structures
that sustain literary culture, problems that, taken together, we have come to call the ‘literacy crisis’”
(Lanham, “Paideia” 132).
Faced with this crisis, we should consider how literacy studies can provide an integrative
framework that can help us harness the converging potentials of work with teaching, writing,
language, and literature in comprehensive departments of English.160 The collapse of majors and jobs
in the 1970s pressed our profession to invest more of its intellectual capacities in its institutional
responsibilities. Literacy and the culture of the book could no longer be assumed and began to be
studied.161 The pressures on English departments have continued to intensify in recent decades as
tenure-track faculty have been replaced by part-time and “temporary” teachers. In response to these
pressures, the profession became more pragmatic about working conditions, the teaching of writing,
and interactive technologies. Our rising attention to computers and writing at work has been criticized
as accommodations to vocationalism by humanists, but as I discussed in the last chapter, such divisive
reactions offer little help or hope. More promising opportunities will open up if we can work to
connect our classroom discussions with broader deliberations on language, literature, and culture, as
Mary Louise Pratt has discussed in “Building a New Public Idea about Language.” I will draw on such
accounts at the end of this conclusion, when I turn to examine the pragmatic capacities of broadly
based departments of literacy. Before considering those potentials, I will first review the case studies
that I have examined in previous chapters. Then, in the second section, I will follow through from the
last chapter to assess how English majors have come to give more attention to writing in response to
the spread of interactive literacies that have made writing such a pervasive part of daily life. Such
reforms need to be assessed with an eye to how they can help us focus our collective energies on
improving support for those who teach most of the courses in the field with few benefits and little pay.
As I will argue in the third section, we will be better able to develop intradisciplinary and public
coalitions to improve teaching conditions if we define our field in ways that include colleagues
working in all four corners of our field of work.
Critical Junctures in the History of Literacy and Literacy Studies
In previous chapters I have examined how the relations of literacy and literacy studies have
been transformed by the convergence of social, institutional, and technological developments that have
changed learning and the learned. Syllogistic disputations lost their educational preeminence when the
learned could no longer deduce authoritative truths from received traditions in a manner that appeared
natural to the literate public. The colonial curriculum was as closed as the isolated communities in
which graduates preached the Word to the converted. Knowledge circulated through face to face
exchanges and gained authority from those who had it. Literacy functioned as a “technology of the
As evidence of his assessment that literature as a “print institution” “lies in ruins,” Kernan cited his
visits to departments that responded to drops in majors by shifting their focus from literary to cultural studies and
restructuring “to teach basic writing and reading skills, creative writing, business and technical writing” (17).
Others have noted that the marginal standing of such studies had long been due to “literature’s refusal to soil
itself by rendering service to the state—when that very refusal is the greatest service that it can render to a polity
that must disguise the extraction of surplus value as cultural dynamism” (Spivak 672).
161
One of the most noted works along these lines was Watkins’s Work Time. Watkins treated college
English departments as “a site of cultural production” involved in a “complex ensemble” of socio-institutional
relations that circulate cultural values through the field through the process of credentialing professionals (8).
160
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self” as students learned by heart through reducing all that was known to hierarchies that could be
memorized and recited (see ***). Learning and the learned adopted a more oratorical register with the
social diversification that contributed to the Great Awakening debates over the representative authority
of clergy. Those debates expanded the influence of popular oratory, and the circulation of the
periodical press. The spread of print contributed to the formation of English as a subject of formal
instruction in higher education. The consummate man of print, Benjamin Franklin, was instrumental in
establishing the college at Philadelphia that included the first professorship devoted to teaching
English. In the decades after the American Revolution, public schooling made literacy second nature
and literature a school subject. The penny press and common school established the foundations for
the institution of a national literature and language. Professors of English participated in informal
cultural economies that were more expansive and inclusive than has been perceived by research on
English studies as a professional field of study, though a different perspective has begun to emerge as
more attention has been paid to the uses of literacy among groups who are still underrepresented in
higher education.
The colonial period provides the starkest example of the need to assess what goes on in the
classroom against what graduates do when they leave it. While the communities served by early
college graduates tended to be more literate than their British counterparts, books were rare, and
instruction concentrated on reducing them to synopses that could be memorized and recited. Scribal
literacy tended to be devoutly deductive. Pneumatics, technologicae, and other mental sciences had an
experiential orientation that was responsive to the experimental impetus of the ‘new learning.’162
Experimental conceptions were also applied to the religious experience. Within the Covenanting
tradition, individuals had to give a convincing narrative of their conversion experience to be admitted
to the church. Most graduates thus preached to communities who shared a closely knit set of beliefs
from which their duties could be deduced. This system of beliefs and practices broke down as
successive generations became unwilling to bare their souls in public. Communities became more
factionalized and argumentation became more accepted, as evident in Lockridge’s ethnographic study
of a representative New England town. Individual religious differences became accommodated in
higher education by replacing theology and logic with moral philosophy and rhetoric at the pinnacle of
the curriculum. In response to evangelical critics and the encroachment of state authorities, educators
set out the distinction between the public and private institutions of education, most notably in the
famous Dartmouth case that first established that distinction in the higher education market (see ***).
As the “circle of knowledge” broke up in the scribal curriculum and the closed communities
where graduates preached, republicanism came to provide a unifying ideology for the expansion of
learning and the learned. New colleges established professorships devoted to teaching English in order
to compete for students and secure popular support. The first was at the College of Philadelphia. It was
a hybrid institution that included academies for boys and girls, as would many of the colleges that
sprung up in the provinces in the antebellum period. Franklin proposed to offer an “English education”
in “useful” knowledge that would challenge the traditional subordination of mechanical to liberal arts,
and so it is not surprising that the first “Professor of the English Tongue and Oratory,” Ebenezer
Kinnersley, was better known as a scientist than critic (see ***). Like many other forgotten
contributors to our field of work, Kinnersley had to devote his energies to teaching writing and reading
to under-prepared students. The best known of the first generation of professors of rhetoric was John
Witherspoon, who graduated alongside Hugh Blair at Edinburgh before emigrating to serve as
President of the struggling college at Princeton where he taught rhetoric and moral philosophy.163 Like
162
In the first volume of The Formation of College English, I explored how the three language arts of
logic, rhetoric, and grammar were transformed by what Hume termed “the science of human nature.” The shift
from a deductive to an inductive logical framework moved moral philosophy away from theology and toward the
social sciences. The process of generalizing from individual experiences was also well suited to the general shift
away from initiating students into the received tradition to assimilate broader classes into education by teaching
them how to make sense of their experience in a self-controlled manner.
163
For more details on Witherspoon, see my edition of his lectures on rhetoric and moral philosophy,
which also includes samples of the rhetoric that he produced as a founder of the American Presbyterian Church
and a signatory of the Declaration of Independence. Like Madison, Jefferson and Hamilton also studied rhetoric,
belles lettres, and moral philosophy with Scottish college graduates.
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the Scottish émigré who served as the first president of the College of Philadelphia, William Smith,
Witherspoon was a conduit for Scottish theories of moral philosophy, rhetoric, and belles lettres. The
most noted compositions to follow from that convergence were the essays that Witherspoon’s student
James Madison composed for the Federalist.
While literacy was more politicized in revolutionary America than in the rest of the British
cultural provinces, the Scottish works on rhetoric and moral philosophy that I examined in the first
volume of my history of college English provide rich sites for assessing how literacy studies were
transformed by the transition from the ancients to the moderns. Perhaps the richest are those of the
first theorist of “consumer society,” Adam Smith, who was one of the first to teach college English
courses (see also Court; Crawford). Smith seems to have taken the rhetorical figure of the “impartial
spectator” from the foreword to an edition of the Spectator (see ***). His discussions of the second
self who monitors social interactions and personal reactions provide a dynamic sense of the dialectical
consciousness of the cultural outsiders who studiously refashioned their responses to conform to
conventions that were commonly acquired as part of the natural upbringing of an English gentleman.
From its origins, college English has taught aspiring provincials how to distinguish themselves by
adopting cosmopolitan tastes. Before they could formalize polite proprieties for their students, Scottish
professors had to first teach themselves how to speak English properly, and in their self-fashionings lie
many telling lessons on the workings of literacy. We have come to understand those workings
differently in the decades since Ong and others set out what critics have characterized as the “great
leap forward” conception of literacy. We have acknowledged that it is schooling as much as literacy
that instills the self-restraint and abstract thinking that distinguish the literate (see Daniell). From that
knowledge, we have come to rethink the critical capacities of the dialectical consciousness of those
with hyphenated cultural identities, ranging from North-Britons to African-Americans. The dialectical
workings of the self as other have shaped college English since its founding, and they are critical to
the introductory class work that remains the most challenging and least respected part of our field.
In my volume on the British cultural provinces, I focused on the functions of
cosmopolitanism, while here I have concentrated on professionalism. The professions loom larger in
America than they do in Britain, in part because America has historically lacked a cosmopolitan center
or literary gentry. I drew upon the conception of “civic professionalism” propounded by Bender to
characterize the community-based intellectuals of the antebellum period who participated in informal
cultural networks comprised of lyceums, teachers’ institutes, and literary and scientific societies (***).
These associations contributed to the greatest proportional growth in the numbers of colleges in
American history. While those colleges have traditionally been criticized as elitist and antiquarian,
Colin Burke’s research shows that antebellum professors were more productive and their students
more diverse than has been recognized. Struggling institutions in the backcountry brought a semblance
of advanced education to the frontier. Such institutions provide a vital opportunity to consider how the
field has been shaped by the “extracurriculum.” This term has been used by Anne Ruggles Gere to
characterize the wide-ranging associations that students and faculty have engaged in beyond the
confines of formal instruction and professional duties. As I discussed in previous chapters, student
associations shaped the origins of college English studies in the eighteenth century, and in the
nineteenth, lyceums, teachers’ institutes, and literary and scientific societies helped to improve the
literacies of women, minorities, and others with limited access to class work with literacy. When these
cultural networks are viewed as part of the educational infrastructure of the time, we can see that many
antebellum colleges were more broadly engaged with their local communities than many
contemporary English departments.
These extracurricular networks provide an alternative frame of reference for thinking about
the need for contemporary professors of English to get more broadly involved with local book clubs,
writing groups, community lecture series, and teachers associations. Research universities have
generally ignored local schools and communities because service has even less standing in the
profession than teaching. This mindset may have advanced the scholarly aspirations of English
departments, but it has undercut the aspirations of workers, women, and people of color who look to
teaching as a means to improve their standing. English is the most broadly based discipline in the
academy. Insofar as our discipline has failed to attend to its broader responsibilities, we have left them
open to reactionary groups to wage literacy campaigns that have worked to limit access to education.
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Such campaigns predate the profession. The first back to basics efforts in American higher education
was the Yale Report in 1828. The Yale Report upheld the classics as an essential prerequisite to
preserve the “present state of literature” against the encroachment of “mercantile, mechanical, or
agricultural” studies and students (see ***). This response would not be the last time that literary
studies were set in opposition to utilitarian concerns to buttress the defenses of a receding tradition.
From a distance, we can see just how reactionary and conflicted such hierarchies have been. Limiting
the literary experience to the classics has incapacitated work with literacy by divorcing its higher
values from its practical uses. As noted many times in preceding chapters, literary critics have often
expressed disdain for “educationalists.” Such disdain has not served educators well, including those
who teach literary criticism.
The four corners of the field did not become professionalized until the Progressive era, when
distinctions were instituted that set literary critics above journalists, linguists above grammarians,
creative writers above compositionists, and professors above educators. Those distinctions were
organized in quite diverging ways by the Modern Language Association and the National Council of
Teachers of English. The former was founded as a scholarly association in 1883, and the latter was
originally envisioned as a congress of teachers’ associations in 1911. After the MLA closed down its
pedagogy section and set itself above such pragmatic concerns as teaching loads, the NCTE was
founded to serve as a “progressive” forum where teachers could organize themselves to address those
concerns (see ***). As represented in MLA and professed by New Critics, the professional hierarchy
of the discipline was set in opposition to the progressive educators who were reforming its institutional
base. Progressive teachers were denigrated as nothing more than social scientists (with whom literary
critics were fighting a “border war” for cultural credibility). The NCTE’s “experience” curriculum was
exactly the sort of Deweyan initiative that threatened to undermine the disciplinary autonomy of
literature. A transactional approach to literature was formulated by Rosenblatt’s Literature as
Exploration in 1938, which was published by the Progressive Educational Association. Unfortunately,
even such Deweyan approaches often ended up serving to valorize “rugged individualism on the plain
of the spirit,” in part because the civic vision of rhetoric was so enmeshed in the formalities of
composition that a rhetorician such as Burke appeared to be a popular and idiosyncratic iconoclast
with limited relevance to the concerns of the discipline (see ***).
NCTE and MLA might have been able to do more for teachers of college English if such
professional organizations had invested more of their efforts in articulating its expertise to broader
audiences. Few professors see teachers as coworkers, and most of us know specialists ‘in our area’
from across the country better than we know the teachers from down the street. This basic fact,
perhaps more than any other, encapsulates our field of vision. In previous chapters, I have focused on
articulation because no discipline is more central to the relations of schools and colleges than college
English, much as it has sought to ignore that fact. Professors looked to impose entrance exams to force
schools to teach writing, but such efforts only reinforced perceptions that the largest area of work in
the field did not really belong in college. While all professions tend to consign their more onerous
duties to paraprofessionals, the distancing of literary studies from the teaching of writing was central
to the disarticulation of college and high school studies that helped to privatize the assessment of
incoming students.164 As a result, the largest networks of teacher workshops are now controlled not by
academics but by the College Board’s Advanced Placement program, which downloads college credits
onto high school courses in a manner that has spread with the popularity of dual enrollment programs.
Writing courses became marginalized by instituting a vision of the field that excluded journalists,
rhetoricians, and others interested in public address, and more recently media studies, new
technologies, and workplace literacies. In these and other ways, writing for popular audiences and
collaborating with schools and businesses have been systematically devalued by the prevailing
research hierarchy. The impact of that hierarchy on the articulation apparatus of college English has
164
My discussion of this development in chapter four drew on the work of Mary Trachsel, who
concluded that as a result of its failure to address its central role in assessment, “the profession has lost
considerable power to transform its professional values into public policy” (178). This failure led directly to the
institution of marginalized first-year courses that are taught by teachers whose work is given little value by their
institutions, in part because it has not been treated and articulated as part of the discipline’s area of professional
expertise.
138
become more pressingly apparent as support for research has become restricted to disciplines that pay
dividends. These and related trends can best be addressed by adopting a more pragmatic stance on the
economic and technological forces that are reshaping the institutional base of the field.
That base is shifting at an elemental level as changes in literacy redefine what it means to be
literate. National surveys of literacy such as the National Assessment of Adult Literacy have examined
three distinct types of literacy. Information literacy, or the ability to interpret expository readings, has
been fundamental to college English studies. The other two forms have traditionally been ignored by
college English: document literacy, which is defined as being able to make sense of graphic texts, and
computational literacy, which is defined as the ability to interpret readings with quantitative data (see
***). These forms have become part of the uses of literacy as it has become mediated in new ways.
The boundaries of college English became much less clear when works of literature lost their
autonomy and began to be seen as nodes in cultural economies that were deconstructed by literary
theories that proclaimed the death of the author. As literacy ceased to be a given and became a field of
cultural study, literary scholars began to acknowledge that “the Gutenberg Age” was coming to an end
with the breakdown of literature departments and other “print-based institutions” (Kernan 9, 12). The
tone was set by works such as Sven Birkerts’ Gutenberg Elegies: The Fate of Reading in an
Electronic Age that characterized the digitalization of literacy as a shift from well bound works to
intertextual networks where individual expressions become information nodes that are not experienced
as embedded in distinct histories but as unfolding simultaneously in an interactive manner more like
cruising channels than reading a book. While books were traditionally identified with their authors’
characters, the death of the “author function” ended the intimacies of writers, readers, and books.
Reading ceased to be an act of isolated devotion, and writing shifted from self-consciously literary
styles to more functional and transparent modalities as print gave way to texts that combine images,
sounds, data banks, and interactive modes of correspondence.
English departments are still trying to figure out what to do with these literate forms and
processes, which Barzin has termed “metatextuality” and “metareading” (154, 158). In the last chapter,
I discussed how McKeon conceived of rhetoric as “a productive architectonic art” that could be used
to explore the generative capacities of interactive technologies and cultural economies.165 The topoi of
rhetoric have proven productive in teaching students how to read as writers by attending to how genres
represent the resources of rhetorical situations in ways that shape transactions between readers and
writers. In the composition program where I work, and many others, we draw upon rhetoric for
metacognitive heuristics to help students reflect upon how they think about writing and reading for
varied purposes in differing situations, including those that will not be confronted in English classes.
Rhetorical analysis can help students critique how experiences and expectations become codified in
the conventions of genres to shape what can be assumed, and what cannot be questioned. Such
critiques have become the guiding concern of critical pedagogy, which has basic continuities with
rhetoric’s traditional concern for civic action (see ***). Action and reflection have been configured as
integral to purposeful literate praxis by Paolo Friere (75n). Other heuristics for fostering metacognitive
reflections upon literacy can be drawn from the interpretive categories that have been developed to
teach imaginative literature, linguistic codes, and reflective inquiry in the classroom. Work in the four
corners of the field can be brought together under the paradigm of literacy studies, which centers our
collective attention on work with reading, writing, language, and teaching. Before considering how
this paradigm can help us marshal support for the work we do, I want to examine how literacy studies
can provide an expansive and integrative framework for reforming programs of undergraduate studies.
Literary and Literacy Crises, or What’s an English Major For?
The profession’s reaction to the transformation of literacy by new media can be traced back to
the postwar communications movement in first-year literacy courses. English departments responded
by consolidating their institutional base. Some professional recognition was granted to composition,
and New Criticism came to demarcate the discipline’s distinctive methods and objects of study.
Mailloux has more recently made the case for “cultural rhetoric” as a synthetic paradigm that offers
hermeneutic strategies for making sense of cultural changes and intellectual transformations, including those that
have come to the fore with postmodernism (195). Mailloux has also attempted to use this paradigm as a
converging point of reference for the varied concerns of an English department, as noted in the next section.
165
139
Programs of study entered a critical phase in the 1970s, when dramatic declines in jobs and majors
pressed for reexaminations of basic assumptions about literary and literacy studies. The field coverage
curriculum contained these pressures within isolated accommodations, as Graff has discussed. As
majors and jobs continued to drop, the profession became even more dependent upon its service
function, and graduate studies in teaching writing were introduced. As rhetoric and composition rose
to become the largest area of hiring in the 1980s, some of those who were hired were able to look
beyond first-year writing courses to help expand the curriculum. To assess how the curriculum has
changed since the surveys that I discussed in the last chapter, I have studied the on-line catalogues of a
representative sample of 257 four-year institutions’ English majors.166 To provide a context for that
study, I will note two recent reports that have attempted to build a sense of crisis about changes in
literacy. Those changes come to the fore at curricular sites where collaborations seem promising
among those who work with literature, language, writing, and English education. As I will discuss,
such collaborations can be brought into a cohesive vision by defining our field as literacy studies. A
broadly based synthesis of this sort can encompass our expanding involvements with critical
pedagogies, cultural studies, new technologies, writing at work, and other concerns that are excluded
from traditional conceptions of our field. Thinking in terms of literacy studies brings our discipline’s
critical capacities to bear on its institutional functions in a way that could help us to improve support
for our work, and also expand its impact.
One of the most striking aspects of undergraduate programs of study is how they have retained
traditional structures despite historic changes in disciplinary theories and institutional conditions. As
discussed in the last chapter, courses on critical theory, media studies, and women writers were added
to curricula in the 1980s along with more technical and other writing courses (see ***). However, few
efforts were made to resolve the contradictions among the methods of New Criticism, the historical
structure of survey courses, and materialist theories of reading and culture. According to Cain, the
formalist methods of New Criticism continued to hold sway after they had been repudiated in the
scholarship because they were not seen as the “legacy of a particular movement” but as “the natural
and definitive conditions for criticism.” As a result,
Nobody, today, questions the place of literature in the curriculum, but few can give any
reasoned justification for it. To the outsider the objectives seem undefined, the methods
disorganized, the content in continual flux, and the results very difficult to evaluate. In short,
there is no clear public image of the teaching of English literature. Its entrenchment in the
curriculum is too often based wholly on tradition. (251).
If Cain is right about our field of study, then we need to reflect upon how this state of affairs affected
not just the decline of majors and jobs but the discipline’s ability to articulate what it is about, and for.
Many professors have felt little need to resolve the discontinuities between what they write about and
what they teach because teaching is not viewed as a form of scholarly inquiry or creative expression.
While professors feel pressured to keep up with the latest theories in their research, few have felt the
need to research curricula in other institutions, or to reexamine curricular assumptions against
students’ changing needs and aspirations.
The tacit level of thinking about teaching helps to explain why the theoretical challenges of
the 1970s were rarely translated into new programs of undergraduate study.167 One proposal for
166
This program of research has included the on-line catalogues and course descriptions of a fifteen
percent sample of 257 four-year institutions with the assistance of Matt Gonzalez, F. Vance Neil, Jennifer
Walker, and Brian Jackson. We used the Carnegie Foundation’s institutional categories to draw up a stratified
sample to represent the broad diversity of English department (see
http://www.carnegiefoundation.org/classifications/index.asp?key=791 ). I have published articles on this
research in Rhetoric Society Quarterly (2005) comparing the position of rhetoric in English and communications,
in College English (2006) briefly articulating how literacy studies can make sense of several apparently
diverging trends in the field, and in College Composition and Communications (2007) reporting more fully on
trends in undergraduate curricula than I have space to do here. The last article was coauthored with Brian
Jackson, who has been a major collaborator in this research.
167
Several such majors were experimented with in the 1980s, most notably at Carnegie Mellon
University, in part as an offshoot of its rise to become a center of studies of rhetoric and composition. Mailloux’s
“Rhetoric Returns to Syracuse: The Reception of Curricular Reform” provides a case study of another attempt to
implement a major in “textual studies.” The effort to synthesize cultural studies, critical theory, and rhetoric
140
curricular reform that was cited but not discussed in the last chapter was Scholes’ Textual Power:
Literary Theory and the Teaching of English. Scholes acknowledged that the “apparatus” of the
discipline needed to be rebuilt from the bottom up because it was founded upon binaries that had
broken down—most notably the hierarchies of literature and “non-literature,” consumption and
production, and the academic and “real” worlds (10). According to Scholes, once the autonomy of
literature was called into question, the literary became seen as arbitrary, and if “belletrism fails, then
any text may be studied in an English class” (18). Scholes proposed redefining the field as “textual
studies,” centered on the study of genre—the “network of codes” that had been conceptualized by
Foucault and studied by such cultural ethnographers as Geertz (2, 3). Scholes was responding to the
loss of faith that took hold in the profession as majors dwindled, and professors became “scared to
death that our temples will be converted into movie theaters” (13). He realized that the rising “demand
for more composition courses” would not overturn professional hierarchies because that demand was
channeled into departmental economies that appropriated the values of literacy in use to sustain the
higher purposes of literary studies (6). For an alternative framework, Scholes developed a
pedagogically engaged vision of the transactional relations of writing and reading, which he further
elaborated in his coauthored Text Book. To break out of the “institutional sedimentations that threaten
to fossilize” college English, Scholes looked to the classroom as a site of collaborative inquiry, with
the model being the stance of the reader as composer of meaning. From this stance, students could
achieve the “textual power” of critical interpretation and practical communication (30).
Such attempts to revise majors in the 1980s were shadowed by the popular perception that
literacy was in a critical state. This literacy crisis was fomented by A Nation at Risk, which has served
as a point of departure for two recent attempts to launch new literacy campaigns: Reading at Risk: A
Survey of Literary Reading in America, published by the NEA in 2004, and The Neglected “R”: The
Need for a Writing Revolution, published in 2003 by the National Commission on Writing that was set
up by the College Board to justify its addition of a written portion to its SAT examination.168 The
National Commission on Writing called for doubling the amount of student writing and engaging
higher education in improving teacher training and writing instruction—all for the purpose of enabling
education to serve “as an engine of opportunity and economic growth”(3). While the College Board’s
Commission called for a renewed emphasis on writing as vital to American business, Reading at Risk
attempted to raise public concern over the decline of “literary reading.” The report was based on
census questions in 1982, 1992, and 2002 that asked people if they had read a play, a book of poetry,
or a novel, including “popular genres.” With over 17,000 respondents in the latest sample, these
surveys provide broad evidence of accelerating drops in the reading of literature: in 1982, 56.9% of
respondents reported having read a work of literature within the last year, while in 2002 only 46.7%
had done so—a decline of almost twenty percent in as many years (2). Given this trend, it was
concluded that the reading of literature “is fading as a meaningful activity.” The steepest declines were
among minorities, males, and the young. While 51.4% of whites reported reading a literary work in
2002, only 26.5% of Hispanics had done such reading. While women’s rate of reading only declined
from 63% in 1982 to 55% in 2002, the rate of literary reading among men dropped more precipitously
(from 49.1% to 37.6%). The sharpest drop was the 28% decline among college-aged readers (18-24
years old). In 1982 that group reported the highest rate of reading literature (59.8%), but in 2002
college-aged readers were the least likely to have read a work of literature, with only 42.8% having
done so in the last year.169
broke up when rhetoric and composition seceded to form an independent program. Scholes also elaborated a
related program of studies in The Rise and Fall of College English.
168
To form the National Commission, the College Board gathered together school superintendents,
university chancellors, and even a teacher, and then it followed through to publish glossy magazines and reports
on the importance of writing to business. This effort was launched in part to disarm criticism of the timed writing
task that was added to the SAT exam, along with marked increases in fees. These efforts of the College Board
and its business partner, the Educational Testing Service, are but one example of how corporations are following
through on the discipline’s historic efforts to download writing instruction on the schools by outsourcing it, as
for example through the use of machine graded entrance exams.
169
Reading at Risk notes several related trends that have also been noted by other research on literacy.
Such research has demonstrated that while the sales of books tripled in the last quarter of the last century, the
141
One of the many striking aspects of these two reports is how they mirror the profession’s
tendency to divorce the practical functions of writing from the cultural values of reading in a way that
incapacitates both. The discipline has not really come to terms with the fact that the interactive
technologies that are often identified with the decline of reading have popularizing writing in ways
that could expand programs of study. One of the few positive findings in Reading at Risk was that
creative writing courses had been taken by 13.3% of the respondents, which adds up to some twentyseven million Americans. 7% of the respondents reported having written a poem, story, or play in the
last year (4). While the reading of literature was significantly more common among richer white
respondents, writing literature was not as stratified by income levels and was about as common among
African Americans (7.4%) as whites (7.6%). Creative writing was most common among college-aged
respondents (with 12.7% having written a poem, play or story in the last year). This age group was
also found to be more likely to attend poetry readings than most other groups, a finding that was
attributed to the “popularity of dub and slam poetry readings” (18-19). These findings underline the
importance of moving beyond the debilitating divisions between literature and writing within the field
to become more broadly engaged with such community building efforts as writing groups and reading
series. Literary studies have been and can be invigorated by treating literature as something that people
compose collaboratively from their collective experiences. This conception of literature presents a less
exclusive and more engaging model of the discipline because it highlights the practical benefits of its
literary emphases. While the reading of literature has declined significantly since 1982, college
graduates were then spending almost one quarter of their time on the job writing (Faigley and Miller),
and writing has become less restricted to workplaces as computers have become almost as common as
televisions in American homes.
As traditional conceptions of literature lose their currency to more interactive forms of
literacy, basic reforms of undergraduate programs appear more and more inevitable. We have little
information on what reforms have occurred in the last two decades because the ADE Committee on
the Major in 2002 decided to devote its efforts to defending the traditional major rather than repeating
earlier surveys of undergraduate curricula. Those surveys found that writing majors and courses were
increasing. To see if that trend has continued, I have conducted a review of the English majors of a
representative sample of 257 four-year institutions with Brian Jackson.170 Professional and other ‘noncreative’ writing concentrations were found in 85.7% of the departments that offer such minors,
emphases, or alternate majors (which were available in two thirds of the departments in our sample).
Related changes in the traditional major are harder to calculate but appear mixed. While writing
courses have increased, only 31.5% of majors explicitly require writing courses, and 28.8% require
linguistics or language courses (as compared to 42.2% and 39.2% in Huber’s survey in 1991-2).
However, grammar and teaching methods courses seem to be much more widely offered, with the
former now in 45.9% of departments and the latter in 42% of departments. Perhaps our most
significant finding has been that business, technical, and other writing concentrations have spread
through the field to become even more common than creative writing concentrations, with 46.9% of
departments that have majors, minors, or emphases offering them in creative writing and 85.7%
offering other writing concentrations. Crucial links between developments in creative and other
numbers of people who reported having read one dropped significantly, as did magazine reading and other print
literacy activities (see Stephenson 7-10; Reading at Risk 1). Television and computers have commonly been
blamed for these trends. However, Reading at Risk reports that readers of literature watched television for 2.7
hours, while those who did not read literature only watched about a half hour more. Also, in a Gallup survey of
over 500 computer and non-computer users in 2001, there was no difference in the amount of time spent reading
print—1.1 hours daily (Reading at Risk 15). The potential of television to increase reading has become
characterized as the “Oprah” effect for the dramatic increases in sales of the books discussed on Oprah
Winfrey’s televised “book clubs.” Such reading groups play a vital role in supporting literary reading and should
be seen as part of expanding our work with the teaching of literature into a public works project, as I will discuss
later in this chapter.
170
I need to be tentative in comparing our results with the previous ADE surveys, including the one
conducted by Huber in 1991-2 and published in 1996, because we surveyed on-line course catalogues and
descriptions, while previous studies were based on surveys filled out by respondents. Also, we were unable to
get clarifications on the categories that were used in previous surveys despite several requests to ADE (see
Miller and Jackson).
142
writing studies are provided by courses in creative nonfiction and journalism, which we found in
32.7% and 30.7% of all our departments (see Winterowd Rhetoric; Bishop “Suddenly”).
Such statistics inevitably gloss over the distinctive potentials of the majors offered by varied
departments. In significant numbers of institutions, English is not a departmentalized discipline, for
24% of the departments in our stratified sample offer journalism and communications majors, though
only 9.1% of the departments offer linguistics majors.171 As discussed in the last chapter, the general
lack of attention to language studies may well be the greatest weakness in majors, for language
courses are fundamental to teaching writing and literature, especially to future teachers. According to
Huber language studies have been integral to the reforms that have built upon coursework in teacher
education and the demand for writing courses in more broadly based institutions. Writing courses
make up almost three quarters of all undergraduate English courses in public institutions, and that fact
has made public institutions more responsive to related reforms of undergraduate curricula, and to
graduate studies in rhetoric and composition. Creative writing concentrations are most common in
research universities, while technical and other ‘noncreative’ writing concentrations are more common
in those types of institutions that are less likely to offer such creative writing studies.172 This pattern is
less clear cut than the one reported by Huber (“Undergraduate”), for she found that technical
communication majors were consistently less common in doctoral than masters institutions and most
common of all in baccalaureate departments (see ***). That finding suggests that English studies are
being revised in differing ways to suit the needs of students in more broadly based institutions, as has
occurred at other transitional points in the development of our field, beginning with the origins of
English studies in provincial colleges that were more accessible than the centers of English education.
This broader history of the teaching of English provides a context for reflecting on the spread of
technical and other writing courses, which have been the first to include work with the technologies
that are transforming literacy (see ***).
As I have discussed in previous chapters, more transactional models of literacy studies have
developed in response to more interactive technologies of literacy. The potentials of these expanding
changes emerge most clearly at junctures where work in the four corners of the field may be brought
together to advance cumulative innovations in undergraduate programs of study, most notably
 the emphasis on the craft of language in creative writing and composition courses,
 the potentially related articulation efforts in composition and English education,
 the attention to multilingual education that should be a shared responsibility of English
education, ESL, and language courses more generally, and
 ethnographic studies of literature, language, and learning that highlight the critical potentials
that emerge at these and other junctures in undergraduate programs.
Each of these concerns has been a point of reference in preceding chapters, and I want to follow
through in the next few paragraphs to discuss their contemporary potentials. I have not defined my
methods in terms of ethnography, but I have touched upon the basic sense of ethnography as the
171
Linguistics seems to be continuing a downward trend in English departments, insofar as 19.3% of
departments were found to include such majors in 1984-5 and 13.4% had linguistics majors in 1991-2 (Huber
“Undergraduate”). Few institutions other than research universities have linguistics departments.
172
175 departments in our sample offer majors, emphases, minors, and concentrations. Such programs in
creative and other writing areas are found in differing percentages in each of the three types of baccalaureate,
masters, and doctoral institutions drawn up by the Carnegie Foundation in the latest revision of its categories in
2005: doctoral institutions have been reclassified into very high research activity, high activity, and simply
Doctoral/Research universities. Institutions that produce at least 50 Masters degrees a year are subdivided by
size into large, medium, and smaller. And institutions that offer at least ten percent of their degrees at the
baccalaureate level and do not offer more than fifty masters or twenty doctoral degrees each year are categorized
according to whether their degrees are in the arts and sciences, more diverse fields, or largely at the associate’s
level. For further details, see http://www.carnegiefoundation.org/classifications/index.asp?key=791.
Majors and
Concentrations
Creative Writing
Other Writing
Bac/Assoc
50.%
0.%
Bac/Div
26.5%
38.2%
Bac/A&S
46.4%
53.6%
MS
46.7%
33.3%
MM
31.8%
54.6%
ML
55.8%
39.5%
DRU
44.4%
66.7%
RUH
72.7%
18.2%
RUVH
81.8%
36.4%
Total
46.9%
42.29%
143
“writings of the people” at several points in my previous analyses, especially in taking note of “race
literature” and the “extracurriculum” in the antebellum period (see ***). Ethnography exemplifies the
modes of civic engagement that are emerging in coursework in areas such as service learning,
community literacies, and social movement studies. In these and other areas, the distinctions among
service, teaching, and research are becoming blurred in ways that open up possibilities to rearticulate
the practical values of our work with undergraduate education.
Almost a century ago, speech and journalism moved out of university English departments,
and the remnants of rhetoric’s concern for public address were divided up between the two cultures of
composition and creative writing. In smaller and teaching-oriented institutions, the discipline did not
become as departmentalized, and tenure faculty have remained more broadly involved in first-year
courses.173 Such departments may be best able to break down the dysfunctional dualism of the truly
creative and the merely technical by drawing journalism, communications, and media studies into
courses on writing for the public. Such an orientation could be vital to preventing technical writing
majors from becoming mere accommodations to vocational pressures. Those pressures can be stronger
in more accessible institutions. Such factors may help to explain why technical writing courses and
majors have been more common in baccalaureate and masters departments. In such departments
(perhaps more than in specialized research universities), those who work with writing may be brought
together around a shared concern for craft. As Mayers has discussed, “craft criticism” has become a
converging point of discussion among varied schools of creative writing as an extension of workshop
methods. These discussions could be enhanced by drawing upon composition research and literary
theories. Of course creative writers have generally kept their distance from writing about theory,
research, and pedagogy out of fears that becoming more academic and less of a writer (see Bizzaro
“Research”). Creative writers often depend upon the academy for their income, as Moxley and others
have discussed, but unlike other English professors, some creative writers are involved in the sort of
writing groups and public reading series that provide community-based alternatives to the disciplinary
professionalism that has restricted our field of study. Many such challenges and possibilities will need
to be addressed if there is to be the sort of rapprochement in writing studies that Wendy Bishop spent
her career working for.
Creative writing courses grew out of the teaching of composition, and their institutional base
was laid upon the teaching of creative writing in progressive high schools, as has been discussed by
Myers and noted in chapter four. In some respects, it was the failure of high school articulations that
led to composition’s becoming reduced to gatekeeper courses dedicated to technical concerns. Such
courses are even more marginal to majors than the English education tracks that often amount to
training students to be critics and then sending them to an education department to talk about teaching.
Insofar as teaching commonly offered status only to those who had none, aspiring institutions and
faculty have traditionally worked to distance themselves from the teaching of teachers. Teaching and
writing were pushed to the boundaries of universities to protect them from being caught up in the rest
of school system. That accommodation served professors of English well until higher education
became even more fully integrated into the prevailing market economy. The most promising model for
how to confront market forces at a grassroots level is provided by the “sustained and sustaining”
teacher networks of the National Writing Project (Gallagher 83; see also Gomez ). The Writing Project
carries on the extracurricular traditions of antebellum lyceums and teachers’ institutes. These
173
As discussed in the last chapter, nontenure and graduate student teachers taught 94.1% of first-year
courses and 69% of all undergraduate courses in doctoral departments in 1999, while in baccalaureate
departments tenure faculty taught 42.2% of first-year courses and 59% of all undergraduate courses (ADE
Committee on the Major, 78). Evans (1999) provides an engaging reflection on the values of a teaching
department, while the faculty in research universities still view such departments as places where one will
“disappear from the larger profession” and lose the chance of “a nationally relevant career” (Hall “Professional
Life,” 194). This cosmopolitan opposition of the national profession to the local institution faces graduates when
they have to decide whether to stay in a town where they may have community roots and teach (often in a
community college) or move across the country to move up in the profession (if they are lucky enough to get a
‘real’ job). This critical juncture in the careers of academics serves as a model for how professions form national
labor pools that disassociate intellectuals from the social networks and public educational systems in which they
might exercise practical agency.
144
associations (along with community reading and writing groups) exercise the sort of collective energy
that the discipline needs to bring into undergraduate programs, both to build public support for its
work and to help students see that work as a collective enterprise rooted in the traditions of diverse
communities. Service learning, student teaching, and internships are vital to developing undergraduate
majors that are involved with community and school networks of the sort epitomized by Writing
Projects.
Such collaborations are fundamental to the progressive tradition in English studies. For all its
limitations, the progressive movement provides a case study in how to develop programs of study that
involve coalitions with teachers, journalists, public agencies, and community organizers. One area
where such coalitions need to be developed is in the making of public language policies. Almost one
in five Americans now speaks a language other than English at home according to the Chronicle of
Higher Education (August 27, 2004, 4). Working in a state where “English Only” laws were passed
without any coordinated response from professors of English, I have often wondered why we do not
see such issues as part of our field of study. My department has strong programs in English as a
second language, and my colleague Roseann Gonzalez has been involved in addressing public
language policies through her writings and community work. Nonetheless, here as elsewhere
collaborations are limited by the fact that ESL tends to have little to do with bilingual education even
though the programs are housed in adjacent buildings. As discussed in the last chapter, the institutional
gap between the two areas grew as public universities moved away from public schools and adopted
an internationalist orientation that served the economic and political agendas that fueled the rise of the
research university. In response to continuing cuts in public funding, many universities have taken a
new interest in outreach and partnerships with local schools. While ‘content’ disciplines see
themselves as having little to do with education, colleges of education have long been more broadly
representative than the humanities, and that fact alone makes them important to those of us who are
committed to recruiting students and faculty from underrepresented groups. Local schools are where
such efforts need to begin, and they ought to be seen as part of the political base and civic obligations
of English departments.174
The hierarchies that have divided our field of study and restricted our abilities to articulate its
values have begun to show the stress of a system facing a critical overload. The junctures where stress
becomes apparent present opportunities to raise questions about working assumptions. The prevailing
research hierarchy has become increasingly unstable because it has failed to account for the work of
undergraduate education. The accountability pressures that may seem threatening to traditional
academics open up possibilities to reposition the civic values of our work with outreach and general
education. A mode of inquiry well suited to these challenges is ethnography, as demonstrated in its
uses in areas such as community literacy that are expanding our field of vision.175 Ethnography treats
research, teaching, and service as integral to collaborative inquiries into how the beliefs of
communities speak to their needs and potentials. As such, it expands upon the transactional dynamics
of reader response criticism that can be traced back to the Rosenblatt’s discussions of how the literary
experience contributes to “the growth in the social and cultural life of a democracy” by helping
peoples understand the practical potentials of their differing experiences (v). Such “cultural
transactions” can, according to Pratt, be identified as a process of translation if we assume an
ethnographic stance that does not impose equivalences upon the “fractures and entanglements”
involved in making sense of differences (“Contact Zones” 32-33). While undergraduate courses often
tacitly hold up the cosmopolitan values of maintaining a critical distance from local engagements,
ethnography assumes that we must become involved with lived communities to understand the values
For the purpose of developing a new “public idea” about the civic values of multilingualism, Pratt
(Building) has called for developing relations with “local heritage communities” to build “pipelines” for people
from those communities to develop educational expertise that builds on their linguistic and cultural resources.
Such community engagements are already part of service learning and some schoolwork in English education.
Those areas provide models for how students and faculty can develop a more rooted sense of how their studies of
language, writing, and literature relate to the needs of local communities.
175
I have discussed the ethnographic dimensions of rhetoric and moral philosophy’s traditional concern
for the dynamics of mores and morals with particular reference to Gadamer’s hermeneutics in “Changing the
Subject” (see also ***).
174
145
of their experiences. As such, ethnography provides a model for how undergraduate studies should try
to relate to the communities we need to help represent in higher education, and also perhaps for how
our professional leadership should relate to the basic work of practitioners in the field.176
Such locally engaged, transactional approaches to research, teaching, and service are likely to
continue to spread through undergraduate programs of study because these approaches are outgrowths
of the basic changes in literacy and literacy studies that have been working up through our field. For
over two decades now, rhetoric and composition has been one of the largest areas of hiring in English
departments. Positions for people with expertise in the area increased as writing programs became
vital to the viability of English departments, and graduate programs grew up to provide that expertise.
As their numbers increased, faculty in rhetoric and composition have developed courses to bridge the
gap between their graduate and first-year commitments (see O'Neill, et al.; and Shamoon, et al.). In
reaction to the collapse of the job market, other areas of graduate study have also adopted a more
pragmatic engagement with teaching, and that engagement will likely spread to undergraduate
programs. Programs of study tend to simply reproduce the programs of research of faculty, but
departments are being pressed to account for their undergraduate majors in terms of learning outcomes
that can bring practical skills up for critical reassessments. The increasing attention to practical skills
can be critiqued as simply a self-serving effort by the profession to meet the rising demand for
knowledge workers with the problem-solving skills and interpretive flexibility needed to adapt to
accelerating changes in the information economy (see Zavarzadeh and Morton). Those practical needs
provide an historic opportunity to redress the “proletarianization” of the basic work of the field that
followed upon the distancing of its professional concerns from the “lay” experience (Horner abbrev
title, 173). Such critical possibilities can best be achieved by focusing our intellectual energies on
institutional opportunities to organize broad coalitions with our coworkers.
Organizing Teaching
The limitations of disciplinary professionalism have been compounded by divisions within the
discipline that have weakened its ability to defend the values of its work against the forces that have
undermined the teaching profession. The social standing of literary studies has become further eroded
as the “managerial and professional classes” have “splintered,” as discussed in the last chapter (Brint
11; see ***). Divisions between traditional and technical intellectuals have been reproduced within the
field in the opposition of literary and literacy studies that has been exacerbated by the rising attention
to technical writing, computer technologies, and the management of writing programs. These areas
have gained ground in the field as departments find that they cannot preserve their resource base while
continuing to ignore the expansive duties that those resources have been committed to support. Our
historic engagements with schools, college admissions, and general education combine with our
traditional concern for writing for the public and interpreting the civic values of literature to provide
an expansive articulation apparatus that needs to be enlisted in supporting teaching. We teach skills
and aptitudes that are highly valued in utilitarian as well as humanistic terms. We need to do a better
job of articulating our values in order to confront the historical trends that have undermined the
professional status of teaching. In the same decades when English majors and jobs collapsed, teachers
lost even more of their professional autonomy as their work came to be defined and evaluated by
‘public’ accountability forces that came to the fore with the literacy campaigns reviewed in the last
chapter (see Herbst). These trends appear unrelated to the concerns of the discipline when it is defined
as a field of study rather than as a field of work. Redefining our field by work with literacy can help us
organize our collective energies around a shared concern for improving support for public education.
Employment in our field has become so degraded that its ability to sustain itself has been
threatened.177 In the last three decades, the numbers of part-time faculty doubled as state funding
176
The application of ethnographic methods to research on teaching has been integral to the broader
effort to reconceptualize teaching as a reflective process of collaborative inquiry, or “practitioner inquiry” as
Horner and others have termed it (177). Louise Wetherbee Phelps has offered rich theoretical accounts of
teaching as “reflection in action” (872). As with related sources in critical literacy and rhetorical studies, Phelps
invokes classical conceptions of techne and praxis for models of knowledge in the making that can serve as
alternatives to the disabling dualism of technical and artistic modes of knowing that have structured English
studies (see also Kinney and Miller).
146
decreased and general education enrollments increased. By 1999 most English classes were being
taught by non-tenure faculty and graduate students according to the ADE Committee on Staffing.
Even while detailing how widely the undergraduate duties of faculty vary in different sorts of
departments, the committee maintained that American higher education “forms a single system” that
requires “identical commitments to scholarship and teaching” (9). While the Committee failed to
consider the discontinuities between the research institutions that trained faculty and the teaching
institutions that hired them, it did acknowledge that
the institutionalization of a multitiered faculty sharply divided in its levels of compensation
and security of employment, in its quality and conditions of work, and in its reward for
teaching or research . . . threatens the communication of basic intellectual and academic
values. Put at risk is the capacity of the academic profession to renew itself and pass on to the
future the ideal of the scholar-teacher—the faculty member who, while pursuing new
knowledge, takes active responsibility for the institution, the department, and all parts of the
curriculum. (4)
While the ideal of the “scholar-teacher” can strengthen calls for collective action, it has traditionally
served to organize the field around a professional hierarchy in which research departments maintain
their preeminence by training faculty to look up to the profession as the center of their intellectual
work and down on service to local communities and institutions as a time-consuming distraction. This
is the “single system” of values that unifies disciplinary professionalism.
That system is partially responsible for having set up the professional economy that is now
collapsing around us because disciplinary professionalism disoriented departments from applying their
research capabilities to their institutional responsibilities in ways that might have strengthened the
standing of teaching. This disorientation is evident in reports such as the MLA Committee on
Professional Employment (1998). Here too, American higher education is characterized as an
undifferentiated system represented by the research university. Its conflicting instructional needs and
research priorities are discussed in the section of the report attributed to John Guillory and David
Laurence (1162-65). Their analysis is skewed by their presumption that rising research revenues
served to underwrite the access of “increasingly ill-prepared” students (1164). Precisely the opposite
dynamic has prevailed in English departments. Our funding comes not from research but from
teaching. It is easy to ignore how teaching assistantships enabled the growth of research-oriented
graduate programs because those programs have ignored the work done by those teachers. By
assuming that research resources expanded educational access, the MLA Committee failed to consider
how research in our field might have acknowledged its dependence upon teaching and used that
knowledge to strengthen its pedagogical base. The MLA report does cite comments by committee
member Cheryl Glenn and others that contributed to the final recommendation that teaching be given
more emphasis in graduate studies, but these comments are mere fragments of the individual position
statements included in the “Interim Report from the Committee on Professional Employment” that
was circulated in 1996. In that report, Glenn and others called for a broad reorientation of graduate
studies to prepare students for nonacademic and teaching jobs, including teaching in community
colleges.
Such committees were formed partially in response to the pressure of Cary Nelson and other
faculty and graduate student activists who have called upon MLA to do more than report on the
workloads of under-paid teachers. Such activism provides a powerful counterpoint to the sense of
unreality that permeates recommendations that departments transform adjunct jobs into tenure-track
lines and provide all new graduate students with fellowships. Such proposals are not simply
unrealistic; they do not offer any real sense of how such goals could be achieved, other than by raising
Major reports on the temping out of teaching include ADE’s “Statement on the Use of Part-Time and
Full-Time Adjunct Faculty” (1983, revised 1987), CCCC’s “Statement of Principles and Standards for the
Postsecondary Teaching of Writing” (1989), MLA’s “Statement on the Use of Part-Time and Full-Time NonTenure Track Faculty” (1994), and “Statement from the Conference on the Growing Use of Part-Time and
Adjunct Faculty” (1997), which was produced by a coalition of ten professional associations, including AAUP as
well as CCCC, MLA, NCTE, and organizations from other disciplines. The Wyoming Conference in 1986 led to
the passage by CCCC of the Wyoming Resolution in 1986. That resolution envisioned setting up a sanctioning
system comparable to that used by AAUP, but its practical action was never enacted.
177
147
enrollment ceilings and reducing graduate offerings to move faculty into the lower division. While the
call to service is important in assessing the profession’s efforts to come to terms with working
conditions, these committee reports are marked by the sort of disengagement from institutional politics
that characterizes most traditional academic discourse. This disengaged reportorial stance sharply
contrasts with the case studies in labor organizing provided by books such as Nelson’s 1997 Will
Teach for Food: Academic Labor in Crisis. Nelson and others such as Eileen Schell have called for the
profession to invest its critical capacities in the pragmatics of coalition building and labor organizing
to address the needs of the part-time faculty and graduate students who teach most English courses.
Unfortunately, these teachers’ work with basic literacy is sometimes shown the same lack of respect
by Nelson and related figures such as Bérubé as has been shown by other leaders in MLA.178 This
dismissive attitude to composition and general education shapes discussions of such vital concerns as
the professionalization of graduate students, for it tends to be presumed that the question is when to
begin scholarly publishing, not how to prepare teachers to approach education as a collective
undertaking (see Nelson 2000).
Nelson and Bérubé have characterized first-year courses as “Rhet/Comp Droid assembly
lines” where “warm freshman bodies [are] processed” (Bérubé 135). Such assessments, according to
Richard Miller, show a “vested interest in remaining wholly ignorant of what goes on in composition”
( 96).179 Miller has himself been attacked by those in literary studies such as Marc Bousquet who have
depicted composition as a “managerial science” concerned with overseeing teaching. Such divisive
infighting is the sort of jockeying for position that is to be expected as historical pressures undercut
some areas of our field and open up others. All of us who have positions that provide time to do
research are complicit with “academic capitalism,” an institutional economy in which competing
groups of employees maneuver for advantages, often by banking on the labors of those who lack the
standing to engage in such maneuvers.180 As Rhoades has discussed, tenure faculty are being
challenged by new classes of “managerial professionals,” many of whom occupy hybrid staff positions
that combine administrative and teaching duties, often without the benefits of tenured faculty (272).
Writing program administrators occupy such positions in departments that reduce composition to a
service function. In such departments, administering a writing program is generally a managerial role
that can be filled by anyone willing to show up for meetings, including untenured professors pressed
into such service. As discussed in previous chapters, traditionalists have defined literary study by its
“uselessness,” and then pressed others into service, and thereby confirm that their concerns are merely
vocational (see ***). This professional economy has imposed heavy workloads on new teachers, and
their supervisors, and thereby pressed them to become efficient just to get by. Prevailing hierarchies
are then reinforced by dismissing efforts to manage the dualisms that structure basic work, as I have
discussed further in “Managing to Make a Difference”.
Rather than setting our areas of work in opposition, we need to change how the political
economy of disciplinary professionalism excludes the majority of our coworkers from full standing in
our field, and also isolates all of us from the rest of the educational system. The writings of Nelson,
Schell, and others on labor organizing should become central to our field of study because they
address issues that are vital to our field of work. Composition provides a case in point for studies in
178
As with the professional reports that I have cited in this and preceding chapters, such writings as
Berube’s The Employment of English and various pieces by Carrie Nelson openly look down upon composition
courses as ways to cover the costs of literary studies. Nonetheless, Nelson has done more than anyone else in the
profession to highlight labor conditions and organize faculty and graduate students to improve those conditions.
179
As Mayers discusses, a dismissive stance on the instructional base of English departments is also
adopted by other books that can be identified with the pragmatic concern for the institutional contexts of literary
studies, including Goodheart’s Does Literary Studies Have a Future (1999), Herman’s Day Late, Dollar Short
(2000), and Williams’ The Institution of Literature (2002). Even while professing to adopt a materialist
orientation, such accounts of the field perpetuate “the fantasy that the interpretive study of literature (or even the
broader domain of ‘culture’) can, by itself, justify the size of any given English department” (Mayers 106)
180
As has increasingly been recognized, tenure functions as a bastion of the perceived autonomy of
disciplinary professionals. Amidst the widespread hiring of adjuncts on a piecework basis, tenure justifies
disciplinary professionals’ perceptions that their work is different from other teachers. Tenure thereby serves to
“keep a whole class of employees on their best behavior” by distracting them from addressing the fact that they
are not autonomous professionals but salaried employees (Sonya Huber, 124; see also Murphy and Rhoades).
148
the political economy of professionalization. As Ohmann, Sledd, and others have long discussed,
composition has “made little if any improvement in who does the front-line work,” despite its
“instituting the usual apparatus (journals, conferences, a professional society, and graduate programs
and degrees), bringing a great advance in theoretical sophistication, and winning job security and good
compensation for advanced practitioners” (Ohmann Politics 43-4). As a result of this professional
apparatus, credentialed specialists in composition have been able to claim the same status as other
disciplinary professionals, including being able to claim to represent the work of teachers. As part of
their professional rise, compositionists have become more theoretical and less interested in classroom
research, following a pattern that saw linguistics shed its concern for language learning, literature
distance itself from teaching reading, and creative writing divorce itself from work in journalism. All
these trends have been shaped by the same forces that press teachers to seek status by leaving the
classroom to move up to administration. In response to these professional tendencies, the four corners
of the field have dropped pragmatic concerns that have gained critical importance as the hierarchies
that have structured the discipline’s development begin to crumble at their base, making it critical to
develop a more broadly inclusive conception of our field of work.
Disciplines lose the capacity to learn from the work that they chose to ignore. English studies
have lost the opportunity to learn from the generations of teachers who have been denied positions that
provide the time needed to step back from their daily duties to contribute to deliberations in the field.
A sense of this loss emerged in the 1970s as the discipline found it hard to renew itself by hiring its
graduates. As thousands of PhDs were temped out of the profession, faculty began to ask “what is the
meaning to the academic world of a whole generation lost to it?” (Hunter 8). Part of this “lost
generation of humanists” was surveyed in a study entitled PhD’s—Ten Years Later, which focused on
six thousand doctoral graduates in six fields from sixty-one universities between 1982 and 1985,
including 1217 PhDs in English (see Nerad and Cerny “Rumors”). Of that number, 814 responded.
This response rate is notable because the thirty-three percent who could not be found or were
unwilling to discuss their jobs were probably less successful than those who responded. Of the
respondents, 53% were tenured ten years after graduation, and 5% more were in tenure-track jobs.
15% were nontenure-track faculty, and 16% were in nonacademic jobs. Of the rest, 5% were
unemployed, and the final 6% were either working both inside and outside academia or did not
provide details on their work. All these groups tended to be “highly critical” of their doctoral programs
for not preparing them to seek jobs and work inside and outside academe (8). Nerad and Cerny
recommend revising graduate programs to provide students with the skills needed in academic and
nonacademic jobs. This outcomes orientation has become increasingly common as the discipline has
been confronted by the accountability pressures that are also forcing undergraduate programs to attend
to the “skills” that the discipline has traditionally chosen to ignore.181
Nerad and Cerny conclude that “if PhD programs in English continue to train their graduates
solely for the future professoriate, then doctoral programs need to reduce their enrollments” (11).
Reducing and eliminating graduate programs has been commonly proposed by professional reports
such as those cited earlier.182 What is less often considered is what would be entailed in expanding
graduate programs to prepare students for a wider range of jobs, and also to prepare them to approach
teaching as a collective enterprise. Few attempts have been made to research the experiences of
graduates (other than isolated departmental reviews that tend to be filed away after serving their
immediate functions). No department that I know of has yet tried to revise its graduate or
undergraduate programs with an eye to preparing students for life after graduation.183 The skills that
Nerad and Cerny recommend are those needed by editors and managers (the two most common jobs
Our tendency to define our discipline’s practical aptitudes in terms of skills is an extension of the
opposition of content and methods courses that has marginalized teaching and writing. The instrumental
capacities of English courses can serve as part of what Burke termed “the equipment for living” and Scholes has
discussed as part of the “cultural equipment” that students “are going to need when they leave us” (Rise 67-8).
182
As discussed in the last chapter, research has shown that more established programs have actually
been less successful at placing graduates than the emerging programs that were targeted for closure. This finding
has been attributed to their being more response to changing needs (see Hellstom 1979; see ***).
183
I have made a case for doing so in “Why don’t graduate programs do a better job of preparing
students for the work we do?” (2001).
181
149
for PhDs who do not teach). Given the state of not just the profession but the professions, the skills
that need to be taught include not just writing and researching but organizing. Our undergraduate and
graduate students are looking at the downside of an historical trend that has undercut the best
entrenched profession in America: while 90% of doctors were self employed in 1985, almost 40% had
become HMO employees by 1998 (A.M. Cohen 294). Such trends are transforming the work of
college graduates, and our discipline cannot afford to continue to ignore them in its programs of study.
While institutional conditions became a subject of study with the pragmatic turn in the profession, we
are only beginning to publish research such as the collections I have cited, and we have not yet
followed through to translate this research into programs of instruction—outside courses on writing
program administration, which too often assume the managerial standpoint that Bousquet and others
have so aptly critiqued.
We need to acknowledge that labor organizing is essential to translating professional
proposals into practical action.184 Senior faculty in research universities tend to see a union as a threat
to the research hierarchy that has rewarded them for working within it. The professional apparatus of
graduate programs, research journals, and scholarly associations has been unsupportive of efforts to
organize its material base despite how dependent the profession is on that base because unions provide
locally situated associations that compete with traditional priorities in the reward systems that
structure academic work.185 These and other lessons have become clear from graduate union
organizing at institutions such as Yale, and from related efforts within the MLA professional hierarchy
by figures such as Nelson. Part-timers have enabled English departments to ‘cover’ general education
and defend the privileges of research faculty, and it is hard to break out of such exploitative
hierarchies to build a sense of common cause, as needs to be done to organize and sustain unions
according to Lovas (198-99). Rather that looking at each other as competing for diminishing
resources, such coalitions should look to the experience of the 63% of full-time faculty in public
institutions who are union members, for unionized faculty tend to make 30% more than unorganized
faculty according to Rhoades (9-10, 78). Decades of work have gone into organizing efforts by groups
such as adjunct faculty in the University of California system (see Tingle and Kirscht ). We need to
develop ways to understand and reward this service as integral to our teaching and research efforts.
For example, Daniel, Blasch, and Caster have discussed ways to increase the visibility of labor groups
on campus by integrating labor concerns into instruction and other intellectual work as part of an effort
to promote the values of coalition politics against the corporate discourse that has become endemic in
institutions of public learning.
English departments have the potential to develop a broad articulation apparatus to address
this agenda and related equity issues. We are the only discipline that teaches all undergraduates,
including our future coworkers in local schools. Many of the outcomes initiatives that are emerging in
undergraduate and graduate programs involve surveying graduates, creating internships, community
boards, and other partnerships with public constituencies that can extend the powerbase of English
departments (see, for example, Dorothy Baker). Public discussions of higher education are often
monopolized by university administrators, but labor organizers have found that they can be quite
effective at challenging that monopoly (see, for example Tingle and Kirscht 226). This strategy
extends to state educational systems. Official articulation channels serve to ease the transfer of any and
all credits, including those generated by dual enrollment programs that may have “delivered” credits
without involving disciplinary faculty. Alternatives are not hard to imagine. Teacher educators have
184
As discussed in chapter four, NCTE was set up to deal with the labor issues that MLA dispensed with
as it narrowed its purposes to supporting research (see ***). This same dynamic is evident in the history of
graduate student teachers. When they first tried to align themselves with the faculty in the colonial period, the
faculty responded that tutors should be categorized as servants (see ***). Graduate students began organizing
themselves almost as soon as graduate programs became organized. Local associations gave rise to the
Federation of the Graduate Clubs in 1893, which began to call for better workloads, with graduate students from
English being one of the largest groups (see Allen 14). The organization ended within a few years as graduate
teaching assistants came to think of themselves as disciplinary professionals rather than as a labor class.
185
An alternative venue for discussions of labor organizing, school partnerships, and community
outreach was provided by the on-line journal Workplace that was cofounded by Bousquet and includes important
discussions with figures such as Ohmann and Nelson.
150
sketched them out many times, as in a workshop on “Articulating High School and College Work” at
CCCC back in 1951 that called for setting up community reading and writing groups, statewide
associations of professors and teachers with conferences and exchange programs, publications of high
school and college writings developed by practitioners rather than corporations, and information
networks to share resources. Some elements of these collaborative networks are common in
comprehensive departments of English. If we look to them for disciplinary models, we can develop
broader conceptions of where our discipline may be headed, and how we can get there by bringing our
wide-ranging areas of work into a coherent paradigm that addresses the needs of our public
constituencies.
Realizing the Pragmatic Potentials of Departments of Literacy
In this book, I have looked past the profession to the broader history of literacy and literacy
studies because I believe that focusing on the interactions between the two can help us to make the
best use of the technological, institutional, and social changes that are transforming our field of work.
The changes facing the discipline do not follow from the history of ideas contained within it, but from
trends that have been most clearly evident in our basic service work. If we want to see the shape of
things to come, we need to look not up but down. As I have tried to show, the professional apparatus
of the discipline has largely been invested in hierarchies that have maintained a conservative
standpoint on the diversification of literacies. In benchmark studies such as the National Assessment
of Adult Literacy, literacy has been expanded to include not just the interpretation of prose texts but
also textual layouts and quantitative data. This historic extension to visual and informational literacies
has inevitably felt threatening to those whose cultural capital is invested in traditional forms of
literacy. The resultant sense of crisis has often fueled literacy campaigns that have pressed teachers to
concentrate on the “basics” and ignore the critical possibilities that open up as conventions are called
into question. Those possibilities can be difficult to realize in the sites where they emerge most
pointedly. Introductory courses in research universities are commonly assigned to novices who may be
struggling to master the very conventions that they are pressed to teach, while those who work in
teaching institutions often have workloads that leave little time in their workdays for reflection. With
the time that I myself have been granted, I have tried to write a history that does justice by the work of
such teachers. In this last section, I want to follow through to address the pragmatic possibilities that
are opening up in broadly based departments that include all four corners of the field.
Such departments generally have a marginal standing in our professional discourse. It is thus
significant but not surprising that when one of our leading professional organizations publishes an
issue surveying disciplinary trends, such as the ADE Bulletin 2003 issue on “The English Major,”
most of the most promising innovations do not come from major doctoral programs. When called upon
to report from the hinterlands of the profession, representatives from teaching institutions characterize
themselves “not so much as specialists in a particular subdiscipline of English studies,” but “as well
informed readers facilitating student encounters with various texts in order to inculcate a love of
reading and language, and a care for culture that will persist throughout students’ lives” (Evans 208).
According to such reports, teaching departments can provide “a sense of being involved in a common
enterprise.” Such departmental cultures can seem rather provincial to newly minted PhDs who think of
“themselves as much more specialized members of a profession” (208). Their research training has
taught them to adopt a more cosmopolitan and less locally situated vision of their work. As Bourdieu
has discussed, institutionalized “fields of cultural production” provide practitioners with a “space of
possibles” that shape their sense of the pragmatic resources and possibilities of the situations they face
by defining what problems matter and who they matter to (Field 176). Research universities prepare
practitioners to situate their work in specialized areas of expertise and often look down upon teaching
and service, while a teaching department may challenge faculty to address purposes that research
departments have temped out to paraprofessionals. Because more comprehensive departments have
not specialized their functions to the same degree, they may be better able to gain funding to translate
adjunct positions into tenure track lines by arguing that hiring teachers on a piecework basis does not
serve the ongoing needs of students or teaching institutions (see Journet ).
In departments that have come to value the pragmatic possibilities of their service mission,
literary studies may become envisioned as a public works project. For example, The Institute at
151
Temple was founded by Steven Parks and Eli Goldblatt of the English Department at Temple
University as an extension of their work with New City Press and Teachers for a Democratic Culture.
Journals that publicize the poetics of everyday life have been published that carry on the tradition of
such student literary magazines as Foxfire. The work at Temple brought together poets, critical
pedagogues, social activists, and others involved with literary and cultural studies. Such ethnographic
collaborations build out from the reading and writing groups that are often sponsored by English
departments, and frequently undertaken without such support by MFAs teaching composition off the
tenure-track. Such teachers are sometimes involved in writing in local businesses, public agencies, and
community settings that could become seen as part of our field of work if adjuncts were viewed as
coworkers (Murphy 33). They provide a sense of the profession of literature that includes
collaborations with communities of writers and readers, writing for the popular press and the world of
work, and literatures of underrepresented groups. Such collaborative engagements provide the best
way to respond to the criticisms that Watkins developed in his influential Work Time. According to
Watkins, traditional approaches to literature often make little more than an “empty” promise, for
students realize that English classes provide a space apart where the workings of literature can be
savored in ways that most people cannot, not just because they do not have the time but because they
do not have the collective investment needed to make literature matter ( 3, 27). As Spellmeyer has
discussed, we need to develop new ways of working with “reading and writing as modes of
involvement with the lived world” (285).186
In departments where the teaching of writing is a “common enterprise,” such potentials can be
enriched by breaking out of the disabling dualism of the vocational and literary that has incapacitated
our discipline and reinforced the hierarchies that marginalize our basic work. Even the most incisive
critics of our profession have stumbled across this dichotomy when they have tried to account for how
English departments depend upon the teaching of writing and yet define themselves as being about
literature. Such accounts are haunted by the practical values that have been excised from modern
conceptions of literature. Ohmann faces that specter when he asks “Is the myth of our usefulness to the
rest of the university and to society then totally unfounded?” According to Ohmann, not as long as we
provide such practical skills as
organizing information, drawing conclusions from it, making reports, using Standard English
(i.e., the language of bourgeois elites), solving problems (assignments), keeping one’s
audience in mind, seeking objectivity and detachment, conducting persuasive arguments,
reading either quickly or closely, as circumstances demand, producing work on request and
under pressure, valuing the intellect and its achievements. (302)
This quick list of the practical values of English studies mixes job skills with an underlying critique of
vocationalism in a way that provides little sense of how close reading or persuasive arguments might
actually enable students to do something about the politics of “Standard English.” The world in which
work is produced “on request and under pressure” has been kept at a distance from how people are
taught to “read closely or quickly, as circumstances demand.” Critical capabilities and practical skills
have been set apart in ways that incapacitated both. We need metacognitive categories for thinking
through the discontinuities between academic and nonacademic writing to develop a practical
understanding of the civic imagination at work.187 Literacy studies could provide us with such a
vocabulary.
186
This promise has powerful public appeal, as evident in how popular creative writing was found to be
in the surveys conducted for Reading at Risk. In a survey reported in the Chronicle of Higher Education asking
students about what seems most essential in their lives, “writing original works” was cited by 15.4% of students.
Such responses might figure differently if the discipline did a better job of articulating how such writing
contributes to other things that students find essential, ranging from the top ranked “raising a family” (74.8%),
earning a living (73.8%), and “helping others” (63.7%) to other concerns that are more obviously connected with
the humanities such as “integrating spirituality into my life” (40.4%) and “developing a meaningful philosophy”
(39.3%). Such popular values provide a broad foundation for civic work with writing and literature (Chronicle
8/27/04, 19).
187
The disabling dualism of the vocational and literary also appears in what goes without saying
whenever undergraduate English majors virtually apologize for having chosen the field, perhaps with a reference
to parental concerns over their career options or an open expression of their own anxieties. Such students often
152
Expanding our sense of the field from literary to literacy studies can help us reflect upon how
the profession has marginalized work with writing and teaching in ways that have undercut our ability
to articulate our practical usefulness, and thereby claim resources to support our work. Teacher
education is but the starkest example of how the discipline has incapacitated itself by not investing
more of our intellectual energies in learning from teaching and schooling. The possibilities of a
learning-centered vision of the discipline are exemplified by the pragmatic experimentalism of a figure
such as Mina Shaughnessy. Shaughnessy recognized that students’ writing made their learning visible,
and she built research on basic literacy on that base, as Susan Miller and others have discussed (1659). Such possibilities have gained professional visibility at historical junctures such as the Dartmouth
Conference where professors and teachers have come together to envision a field of work that includes
their shared concerns (see ***; also Harris). Such possibilities have been foreclosed by the traditional
tendency to distinguish the “content” of the discipline from the methods used to teach it (see Franklin,
Laurence, and Welles xii). Teachers who have invested their time in learning from students have long
recognized that the opposition of content and skills disables the discipline because “other studies are
something to know; this is something to do” (Genung 1887; qtd. in Brereton 135). The progressive
tradition in English studies was centered on such assumptions, as Gallagher has discussed. Decades
ago, the profession was challenged to recognize that “if poetry is not to vanish from the experience of
the great majority of American secondary school pupils, their English teachers will have to become
better teachers of poetry” (Grommon 280). Now that the eclipse of literature has become a real
historical possibility, we should come to recognize that supporting teachers is vital to our field of
work.
Preparing a Nation’s Teachers represents a high profile attempt to face this responsibility.188
In the lead chapter, Donald Gray admits that because his colleagues at Indiana University “don’t think
of themselves as teachers who teach teachers, they pay little explicit attention to questions about
pedagogy” (Gray 57). He tries to appeal to those of “us” who wonder why teachers should be of
concern to “members of the MLA [who] have all been educated to use as one pure measure of
professional achievement the presence of our names in the pages of PMLA” (1). In such remarkably
unapologetic statements, the hierarchies of the profession are set out in ways that undercut the
ostensible purpose of showcasing its commitment to teacher education:
Let the secondary schools perform their traditional tasks of educating citizens in the discourse
of their culture so that they can fit gainfully into it. Ours is the yet more interesting task of
teaching students how to interrogate the premises of their culture so that they become
skeptical citizens of it. (9)
According to self-serving premises that are shown remarkably little skepticism, literary studies “will
only be confused by the introduction of instrumental, practical means and ends” (7). While Gray
valorizes the uselessness of liberal education as set out by Cardinal Newman, he also expresses the
profession’s deepening anxieties that this tradition had exhausted its uses: “While we have neglected
or disdained teacher education, it has become a discipline to whose principles and imperatives we
must now accommodate our own” (3). This standpoint is divorced from that assumed by contributors
from more broadly based institutions such as Illinois State University, where the challenges of
teaching teachers are seen as a case in point for rethinking how majors are structured around students’
learning process to prepare them for what they will do when they leave the classroom.
Such departments provide models for coming to terms with the challenges of articulating our
values to public constituencies. “Having disdained popular-representation, we have predictably been
inept in representing ourselves in the public sphere,” according to Graff (1993, 112). Graff has offered
the best known accounts of the need to reform “the institutional patterns of daily work” for the
purpose of developing more generative and integrative structures (119). Graff argued for “making the
conflicts of literary studies part of the subject matter of literary education itself” (112). His
institutional history of the “profession of literature” contributed to the pragmatic turn that built upon
relate how they switched from a major that left them cold to something that made sense to them. We have an
obligation, I think, to provide them with better accounts than we often do of how English majors will provide
them with options when they leave school.
188
MLA established the Teacher Education Project in 1993 with funds from private foundations and
federal agencies and held two meetings that led to the collection of reports on teacher education programs.
153
sociological research on how the power of professionals is “weakened by the insulating
compartmentalization of the bureaucratic organization in which they work” (Larson 29). Our attention
to the pragmatics of professionalization has helped us to see specialization as both a means to power,
and a means to contain it. This recognition led to attempts to develop more integrative models, with
textual studies held forth as such a model in 1980s by Scholes and others. Then in the 1990s cultural
studies became an increasingly popular paradigm. I have proposed literacy studies as a model because
it is expansive enough to include our coworkers in local schools, our expanding engagements with
community and workplace literacies, and also the broader technological and cultural transformations
that are redefining what it means to be literate. Colleagues who work with visual and information
literacy have become common in comprehensive departments, and they are often involved with
interdisciplinary collaborations on learning, teaching, and outreach that are being infused with efforts
to develop civic models that look to public service as a means to redress the fragmentation of students’
experience and the university’s public mission.189
One source of that fragmentation is the transformation of classrooms and texts by new
technologies of literacy. “The remaking of the ‘modern literary system,’” according to Hesse, has
advanced to the point where it no longer involves “a technological revolution (which has already
occurred) but the public reinvention of intellectual community in its wake” (29). “The modern literary
system” may be coming to its end as “linear and concrete literacies” are replaced by interactive
technologies (Hesse 29; Zavarzadeh and Morton 67), but one need not adopt a millenarian historical
outlook to recognize that we are facing institutional, epistemological, and technological changes that
are as dramatic as those that shaped the transition from classical to modern studies. In the first volume
of this history of college English, I examined how the three language arts of the trivium were
transformed by the “science of human nature” to replace rhetorics with poetics at the pinnacle of
literacy studies in response to the evolution of the reading public into a modern consumer society. The
spread of interactive technologies and economies are now leading to similarly fundamental and wideranging changes, including more transactional models of literacy studies. These models open up
possibilities to develop collaborative networks that could help us break out of the disciplinary
professionalism that constituted literary and linguistic studies as autonomous fields of expertise, but
did little to contribute to the professional standing of teaching. Faced with a sense of the profession
that does not fully include most practitioners in the field, or the courses they teach, we need to develop
a vision that is both more expansive and more strategically situated. I hope that this history has served
to provide a better sense of some of the critical junctures among disciplinary trends, institutional
resources and social needs where strategic action have been and can be undertaken.
As I have discussed, the profession has taken a pragmatic turn after decades of drops in majors
and professional jobs. Faculty hiring has shifted to address areas of growth such as creative writing,
ESL, rhetoric and composition, and cultural, ethnic, and media studies, leaving some departments
confused about how such areas relate to each other. Some of us have moved beyond the boundaries of
English departments to set up new places to work—not just in independent writing programs but
varied interdisciplinary initiatives concerned with teaching with technology, community-based
outreach projects, and partnerships with schools and workplaces. These are the practical sites where
the discipline is discovering new resources to connect with broader social needs. Literacy studies
provides a vision that includes the four corners of the discipline: literary and cultural studies, language
studies (including ESL, critical discourse studies, and other areas of applied linguistics), English
education (including articulation and community partnerships), and writing studies (which has been
incapacitated by the debilitating dualism of “creative” and “technical” writing in many departments,
but perhaps less often in those where journalism and communications courses fill the curricular void
between composition and creative writing). The recent turn in the profession to address the pragmatics
of its interpretive assumptions and working conditions has historic potentials. It is basic to trends
ranging from service learning and community literacy through work with ethnography and new media
189
This civic movement has been identified with works such as Habits of the Heart: Individualism and
Commitment in American Life (1985) and related works by such figures as Benjamin Barber (see Christopher
Lucas 281-92). Service learning has been a key element of this general movement, which has been promoted by
the Carnegie Foundation through the American Democracy Project as reported in Educating Citizens and the
Ford Foundation through the American Commitments Project.
154
to studies of technology and social movements. These trends follow upon historic changes in the
technologies and political economies of literacy to institute more transactional, locally situated, and
practically engaged lines of inquiry. Though the pragmatic matters at issue seem clear, where these
inquiries will take our work remains an open question.
155
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